howell, rosa (nhtsa)...dear mr. ditlow, thank you for the additional information you sent us. i have...
TRANSCRIPT
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Howell, Rosa (NHTSA)
From: Hershman, Larry (NHTSA)Sent: Tuesday, February 02, 2010 3:34 PMTo: Howell, Rosa (NHTSA)Subject: FW: DP09-005 Docket
Rosa ‐ Please enter. Thanks.
From: Clarence Ditlow [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Tuesday, February 02, 2010 12:12 PM To: Hershman, Larry (NHTSA) Cc: Demeter, Kathleen (NHTSA); Yon, Scott (NHTSA) Subject: RE: DP09-005 Docket My error, I saved the January 12 email on January 15 & got the date wrong. I will shortly send you a text version of the Estes deposition. Clarence
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Tuesday, February 02, 2010 11:11 AM To: Clarence Ditlow Cc: [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: RE: DP09-005 Docket Dear Mr. Ditlow, Thank you for the additional information you sent us. I have one question for you: I’ve sent the January 20 and 31 emails and attachments from you, along with the Estes deposition CD I picked up from Michael Brooks on January 22, to be processed and entered into our public file, but the immediately previous submission I have from you was your email to Kathy DeMeter dated January 12. I have no submission dated January 15. If you did submit something on that date, could you please forward it to me? I will notify you when the Estes deposition is processed and entered. Thank you, Larry Hershman Lawrence L. Hershman Office of Defects Investigation, NVS-212 Office of Vehicle Safety - Enforcement National Highway Traffic Safety Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Washington, DC 20590 [email protected] (202) 366-4929
From: Clarence Ditlow [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 10:21 PM To: Demeter, Kathleen (NHTSA); Yon, Scott (NHTSA); Hershman, Larry (NHTSA)
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Cc: Medford, Ronald (NHTSA) Subject: DP09-005 Docket Please add the CAS submissions from January 15 and 19, 2010 to the petition file as well as the submissions earlier today. We continue to develop addition information such as finding and photographing a 1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee with the reinforcement bracket designed to prevent disconnection or severing of the fuel lines through the frame rail & which also aided in moving the fuel tank over the differential. I am attaching one set of the first 6 of 24 photos to this email so that Ron Medford can see one example of what we are discussing. Please let us know when the videotape of the Judson Estes deposition is added to the file & sent to GWU for inclusion in the electronic repository there. Thank you for your cooperation in this matter which involves more know fire deaths in 1993‐04 Jeep Grand Chrokees than known unintended acceleration deaths in Toyota to date. Clarence Ditlow Executive Director Center for Auto Safety 1825 Connecticut Ave NW Washington DC 20009
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Howell, Rosa (NHTSA)
From: Clarence Ditlow [[email protected]]Sent: Tuesday, February 02, 2010 12:48 PMTo: Hershman, Larry (NHTSA)Subject: DP09-005 Docket Attachments: Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt; Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
Attached is a text version of the Estes Deposition for insertion in the docket of DP09‐005. Please let me know if you have any problems opening these files. Clarence Ditlow Executive Director Center for Auto Safety 1825 Connecticut Ave NW Washington DC 20009
DP09-005
MEMO 2-2-2010
ATTACHMENT ESTES 20050527
VOL I
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
1
1 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NEW YORK 2
3 NATASHA AUSTIN AND NICOLE AUSTIN,
4 Plaintiffs,
5 -against- Index No. 10215/00 Volume I 6 DAIMLERCHRYSLER CORPORATION, WESBURY JEEP EAGLE, INC., 7 MARIBEL ORTIZ, AS INTENDED ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE 8 OF JOSE A. SIERRA, DECEASED, GRACE H. EVANS AND LISA N. 9 EVANS, Defendants. 10 ________________________________/
11
12 The videotaped deposition of JUDSON
13 B. ESTES, a witness in the above-entitled matter,
14 taken before Melinda S. Moore, (CSR-2258), a Notary
15 Public, at 840 West Long Lake, Suite 200, Troy,
16 Michigan, on May 26, 2005, commencing at or about
17 1:58 p.m.
18 APPEARANCES: 19 Greene, Broilett & Wheeler 20 BY: CHRISTINE D. SPAGNOLI 100 Wilshire Boulevard 21 Suite 2100 P.O. Box 2131 22 Santa Monica, California 90407-2131
23 Appearing on behalf of Plaintiffs 24
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1 APPEARANCES, Continued:
2 Herzfeld & Rubin BY: MAUREEN FOGEL 3 40 Wall Street New York, New York 10005 4 Appearing on behalf of Defendant 5 DaimlerChysler Corporation
6 Chrysler Corporation Office of the General Counsel 7 BY: GREGORY D. McMAHON 800 Chrysler Drive 8 Auburn Hills, Michigan 48326
9 Appearing on behalf of Defendant DaimlerChrysler Corporation 10
11 VIDEO TECHNICIAN:
12 JAMES WALKER, Reitman Video Specialists (248) 344-4271 13
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1 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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3 WITNESS: PAGE:
4 JUDSON B. ESTES
5 Examination by Ms. Spagnoli 6
6 E X H I B I T S 7 Deposition Exhibit No. 1 8 Fuel Systems & Impact Presentation 9 (DC 05115-130)
10 Deposition Exhibit No. 2 04: Design Guidelines - 11 Fuel Supply - General (DC 05045-53) 12 Deposition Exhibit No. 3 13 Compliance Report re: Fuel System Integrity 14 1996 'ZJ' Body, Jeep "Grand Cherokee" Sport 15 Utility
16 Deposition Exhibit No. 4 Structures Laboratory - 17 Status Report 12/3/90 (DC 7082-85) 18 Deposition Exhibit No. 5 19 3-2-95 Memorandum to Distribution from 20 J.B. Estes re: 1996 ZJ Post Impact 21 Review Meeting from 2-2-95 (DC 05029-34) 22 Deposition Exhibit No. 6 23 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test Request 24 re: ZJ8602 (DC 7087-91) 25
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1 EXHIBITS, continued:
2 Deposition Exhibit No. 7 Safety Test, Vehicle 3 Crash Test Letter re: VC5380 4 (Dc 04052-71)
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1 Troy, Michigan
2 May 26, 2005
3 * * * * *
4 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Today's date is May the
5 26th, 2005, and we're on the record at 1:58 p.m.
6 This is the video deposition of Mr. Judson Estes,
7 and we are at the offices of Miller, Canfield in
8 Troy, Michigan. This is the matter of Austin vs.
9 DaimlerChrysler, et al.
10 Could counsel put their appearance on the
11 record, please.
12 MS. SPAGNOLI: Christine Spagnoli
13 representing the plaintiffs.
14 MS. FOGEL: Maureen Fogel from the law firm
15 of Herzfeld & Rubin representing DaimlerChrysler
16 Corporation.
17 MR. McMAHON: Gregory McMahon for
18 DaimlerChrysler.
19 * * * * *
20 J U D S O N B. E S T E S
21 after having been first duly sworn by the Notary
22 Public, was examined and testified on his oath as
23 follows:
24 * * * * *
25
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Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
1 EXAMINATION
2 BY MS. SPAGNOLI:
3 Q Could you tell us your name, please.
4 A My name is Judson Bert Estes.
5 Q And are you currently an employee of the
6 DaimlerChrysler?
7 A Yes.
8 Q Where are you physically housed?
9 A In the Auburn Hills DaimlerChrysler Technical
10 Center.
11 Q How long have you been employed by DaimlerChrysler?
12 A Nineteen years.
13 Q So that means you predate the merger between
14 Chrysler and Mercedes-Benz?
15 A Yes.
16 Q Okay. What is your educational background?
17 A I have a bachelor's degree in physics.
18 Q Okay. From where did you get your degree?
19 A Wayne State University.
20 Q And when did you finish that degree?
21 A 1986.
22 Q What positions have you held since you became
23 employed at Chrysler?
24 A I started in the impact crash film analysis area and
25 I progressed to the impact analysis at Chelsea
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1 Proving Grounds, and then I went from Chelsea to
2 Jeep and Truck Engineering, where I was in vehicle
3 crash test program management. I went from there to
4 the Jeep Assembly Plant in Toledo. I went back to
5 Jeep Engineering in Detroit, where I was design and
6 release for our seat belts and steering column, and
7 then my most recent assignment was at Auburn Hills
8 in the corporate quality.
9 Q Okay. For what period of time did you work in
10 impact analysis? And I would take that up to your
11 time before you went to the Jeep Assembly Plant in
12 Toledo.
13 A I was in impact analysis and impact test, running in
14 one capacity or another, from 1986 until 1998.
15 Q Okay. And since you've -- let me withdraw. You
16 said you went to the Jeep Assembly Plant in Toledo.
17 What did you do at that plant?
18 A It was called interior leader, and that's a
19 responsibility for the interior parts of the XJ Jeep
20 vehicle.
21 Q And then when you came back to Jeep Engineering in
22 Detroit, you said you were a design and release
23 engineer for seat belts and steering columns; is
24 that right?
25 A Design and release supervisor for seat belts and
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Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 1 steering columns.
2 Q Okay. So with respect to specifically any role that
3 you've had that involved impact analysis or crash
4 test analysis, that's from your early days up
5 through 1998; would that be correct?
6 A Yeah. I think it's '98 when I stopped.
7 Q Okay. And during your time in impact crash analysis
8 or vehicle crash test program management, during
9 that time did you have a role in reviewing and
10 preparing and running crash tests that involved
11 various Jeep Cherokee and Grand Cherokee vehicles?
12 A Yes, I did.
13 Q Can you tell us what the earliest vehicle, Jeep
14 vehicle you were involved with as far as crash
15 testing?
16 A The '96 Grand Cherokee.
17 Q Okay. And when did you work on the '96 Grand
18 Cherokee, during what period of time?
19 A Previous to its launch, the '96 Grand Cherokee, in
20 late '94 through through mid-'95.
21 Q Okay. And then were you also involved in crash test
22 performance and analysis involving the 1997 Jeep
23 Grand Cherokee?
24 A Yes, I was.
25 Q Tell us, if you can, just generally what the
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1 procedure is for requesting a crash test, in otherPage 8
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2 words, who initiates the testing request.
3 A The test request is written by the vehicle
4 development crash test engineer, and that initiates
5 the crash test sequence.
6 Q And then does that request get transmitted -- and
7 while you were at the impact analysis center, does
8 that get forwarded to the crash test management
9 program to then set up the test?
10 A The test request gets sent to Chelsea Proving
11 Grounds in order for it to become on the schedule
12 for the crash tests.
13 Q And then who actually arranges for the vehicles and
14 gets the tests set up and performs the tests?
15 A The tests are performed by the Scientific Labs
16 personnel at Chelsea.
17 Q Okay. And was that a role that you filled at some
18 point in your career at Chrysler?
19 A Actually running the vehicle crash tests at Chelsea,
20 I did not do.
21 Q Okay. Did you assist in making arrangements for
22 crash tests to be conducted?
23 A I worked at Chelsea on the film analysis section for
24 the full-size cars, the entire vehicle. All I did
25 was the film analysis section while at Chelsea,
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1 running the tests.
Page 9
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 2 Q Okay. And your work in film analysis, just give us
3 briefly a description of what you did with respect
4 to that type of analysis.
5 A The film analysis works so that you can trans --
6 transform the camera into a transit and use the
7 camera lens like a transit to identify unknown
8 objects in the field of view. When the car comes in
9 and is impacted, you don't know where it is so you
10 take the cameras and transmit them into a transit
11 and run a series of calculations to identify the
12 location, the roll, pitch, yaw and the X, Y, Z of
13 the camera, and take that data and then calculate
14 where the car is relative to the ground and where
15 things on the car or in the car are relative to the
16 car axes coordinates, and so those coordinates are
17 calculated, and that's what you do in film analysis,
18 is set up the cameras, set up the coordinates and
19 then calculate relative motion between the ground,
20 axis of the coordinates and the targets of interest
21 on the car are.
22 Q Okay. And does that assist you in verifying the
23 speed of impact and the various --
24 A The speed of impact is verified with an
25 electronic -- an optical trap timer.
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1 Q Okay. The film analysis allows you to do what with
2 respect to evaluating the performance of thePage 10
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
3 vehicle?
4 A The performance of the vehicle in a crash test, you
5 can calculate the dynamic crush. That is the
6 primary metric that's produced by film analysis.
7 Q Okay. And is dynamic crush routinely recorded in
8 the crash test reports?
9 A Yes.
10 Q Okay. You said that you then progressed to impact
11 analysis at the Chelsea Proving Grounds, and I
12 believe you said that was on full-size vehicles that
13 you did that work?
14 A The impact simulator at Chelsea, and that's not on
15 full-size vehicles. That's on a much smaller
16 version of it. The simulator uses only the interior
17 of the vehicle.
18 Q Okay. And which vehicles did you work on when you
19 were in impact analysis at Chelsea?
20 A So many, I can't recall them all.
21 Q Okay. Would these be things testing like the seat
22 belts and seating systems and --
23 A Those are among the things that are tested on the
24 simulator.
25 Q Okay. When you went to -- from Chelsea to Jeep and
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1 Truck Engineering, what year did you start there?
2 A '94, as I recall.
Page 11
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 3 Q And this is the beginning of your work managing the
4 crash test program for the '96 and '97 Jeep Grand
5 Cherokees?
6 A Yes.
7 Q Did you -- when you went to work in 1994 in the Jeep
8 and Truck Engineering as the crash test program
9 manager for the Grand Cherokee, at that time did you
10 review and become familiar with the crash tests that
11 had been performed on the earlier model Grand
12 Cherokee vehicles?
13 A There is a process where you take the new engineer
14 and explain to them what the status the program is
15 in its development, and in that process you become
16 familiar with the previous tests and what the status
17 of the vehicle and its development phases are.
18 Q Okay. And so is 1994 when you first became familiar
19 with any prior testing on the Grand Cherokee model
20 vehicles?
21 A Yeah. Yes, that's the primary part where I started
22 to be responsible for the Grand Cherokee testing.
23 Q Okay. So up until that time, even though you were
24 in -- generally working in impact analysis, you had
25 not been exposed to crash testing on the Grand
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1 Cherokees that had occurred in the early 90's?
2 A I would have seen some of the films in the course of
3 our analysis. The analysis that you perform, youPage 12
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4 don't look at much what's on the film except for the
5 targets of interest where you're trying to perform
6 the work that was requested, so I had seen films,
7 I'm certain, of which I cannot recall which ones
8 because I never looked into the details of the film
9 beyond the aspects of which I was focused on while I
10 did the film analysis work.
11 Q Okay. And is there -- let me withdraw. Have you
12 ever given a deposition before?
13 A Yes.
14 Q How many times?
15 A Twice, I think.
16 Q Do you recall the names of either case that you gave
17 depositions in?
18 A No.
19 Q Did either case involve a Jeep Grand Cherokee?
20 A I believe one did, but I'm not real clear.
21 Q Okay. How long ago did you give the last
22 deposition?
23 A A couple years ago.
24 Q Okay. When you first took over as vehicle crash
25 test manager for the Jeep Grand Cherokee in 1994,
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1 who had been responsible for the crash test program
2 for that vehicle before you?
3 A My memory is a little unclear on that, and there
Page 13
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 4 were two people in the office before me and when
5 there was more work than the two guys could handle,
6 it's unclear as to who was actually the signatory on
7 that. I didn't sign the compliance documents which
8 is the final responsibility. The manager I worked
9 for, Ed Zylik, was responsible for the activities of
10 those two men, but exactly which one of then was
11 doing what before I got there, I couldn't say.
12 Q And who were the two people? What were their names?
13 A Vic Hannawi and Don Mallet would have been the two
14 men that had some participation in it before I
15 arrived.
16 Q And you were working with those people in the same
17 department prior to 1994; is that right?
18 A No. I was not working in that department prior to
19 1994.
20 Q Okay. Were you -- your department of impact
21 analysis would provide information for the crash
22 test impact management people? Is it the impact
23 department?
24 A The Impact Analysis Group provided the requested
25 film analysis to the program managers in Vehicle
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1 Development, then some of the design and release
2 engineers for the Restraints and the Structures
3 Group.
4 Q Okay. And the crash test management peoplePage 14
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
5 interacted with who with respect to the work that
6 they were doing, same people?
7 A The crash test management people interact with the
8 Proving Grounds scheduling groups and the design and
9 release engineers to obtain the proper build level
10 parts to build the vehicles to test.
11 Q Okay. Do the crash test management people actually
12 provide feedback to the program managers on the
13 results of the tests?
14 A Yes, they do provide feedback to the program
15 managers on the status of the impact test program.
16 Q Okay. So when -- as a manager of a crash test
17 program, when you run a test, you provide a report
18 to other people, right?
19 A No, no. Actually each test does not generate a
20 report beyond the Vehicle Crash Test Letter.
21 Typically the program is managed at a level that
22 doesn't generate a report for each and every car
23 that you run.
24 Q Okay. So the Crash Test Letter is done for each and
25 every test you run, though?
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1 A Yes, ma'am.
2 Q And the Crash Test letters are signed by the or --
3 by the crash test manager?
4 A I don't believe they're signed by the manager. I
Page 15
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 5 think they're issued by the crash test engineer at
6 Chelsea.
7 Q Okay.
8 A I never did that job but I believe that's where they
9 come from.
10 Q Okay. And do the Crash Test Letters go to the crash
11 test managers?
12 A The program managers in crash test receive the Crash
13 Test Letters.
14 Q Okay. So when you were the vehicle crash test
15 manager for the Grand Cherokee, you got the Crash
16 Test Letters?
17 A Yes, ma'am.
18 Q And then when you got those, you would then provide
19 those to the program development engineers and the
20 release engineers?
21 A Typically you wouldn't provide them the letters; you
22 would talk about a specific result or how the
23 vehicle performed and how -- if the vehicle was
24 going to be modified as a result of those tests.
25 The letters themselves are typically looked at for
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1 the information content they carry and then just
2 that information goes forward, did it pass the test,
3 what was its score, what did it get for crush. That
4 kind of stuff is what's moved forward. The letter
5 itself typically doesn't get a very widePage 16
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6 distribution. I'm sure you have a copy of the
7 letter and you can see on the end there's three or
8 four names typically on a Vehicle Crash Test Letter,
9 and that's who it gets distributed to automatically.
10 Q Okay. And when you say that the information -- and
11 you described the information that would get passed
12 on to the development and release engineers -- would
13 that be done orally or would you do it in a writing?
14 A Almost always orally in a meeting.
15 Q Okay. Were there regular meetings held to follow up
16 when crash tests were done on --
17 A Yes.
18 Q And then you as crash test manager for a particular
19 vehicle would go to the meeting along with the
20 development and release engineers?
21 A Yes.
22 Q And then would there -- would you have a discussion
23 what to do next, something need to be changed or --
24 A Yes. There would be an engineering problem-solving
25 task, and we would work through it with the group
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1 there, using their engineering expertise and
2 experience in impact test as to what, if anything,
3 should be done to the vehicles.
4 Q Okay. As the vehicle crash test manager for the
5 Jeep Grand Cherokee, did you have some guidelines
Page 17
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 6 that you used in evaluating a performance of the
7 vehicle on a crash test?
8 A Yeah. Yes, there are guidelines.
9 Q Okay. What guidelines can you recall using in the
10 '94, '95 time period as it related to the analysis
11 of the Grand Cherokee's crash test performance?
12 A The primary metrics that we used for 208 compliance
13 we had said we wanted to have a 20 percent margin
14 underneath that, and that was basically our
15 guidelines for evaluating performance, were we under
16 our margin, under the federal requirements.
17 Q Okay. And you mentioned specifically 208.
18 A That's the primary impact test work.
19 Q And that -- when you say 20 percent, 20 percent
20 below what, the level of injury criteria?
21 A There are, in 208, required injury criteria. It's
22 20 percent below the required level where we were
23 targeted at.
24 Q All right. And was that a guideline or was that a
25 policy of the company?
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1 A It was not a written policy at that time.
2 Q Okay. But it was your standard practice?
3 A It was our standard practice.
4 Q And did you have a guideline or a policy with
5 respect to fuel system performance in the '94 and
6 '95 time period?Page 18
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7 A In the 301 tests, we wished that the fuel system
8 would have zero leaks, and if they had any leakage
9 at all, we considered that to be a failure. In that
10 the 301 system allows, you'd have five ounces of
11 fluid leakage, any fluid leakage in our test was
12 considered to be a failure, and we would rerun the
13 test and modify it to avoid any leakage.
14 Q Okay. In the '94 and '95 time period was there any
15 guideline or criteria with respect to contact
16 between the fuel tank and components such as the
17 axle, shocks, rear suspension?
18 A No, at that time there wasn't any written guideline.
19 Q Was there an understood guideline that -- similar to
20 the 20 percent injury criteria for the 208 test?
21 A What we wanted to do was to get the vehicle to
22 perform up to the standard and exceed it in terms of
23 leakage, and there are certain things you don't want
24 to introduce in the field around the gas tank. We
25 didn't want to have any sharp edges around the gas
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1 tank. We wouldn't want to have any things that came
2 to a point either in a fold or as a mechanical
3 device, but in terms of contact itself, there
4 weren't any guidelines regarding what it should and
5 shouldn't run into, but more along the lines of the
6 shape and formation of the things that it came in
Page 19
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 7 contact with.
8 Q Did you have an understanding that if you saw
9 contact but it didn't produce a leak that that would
10 be investigated further by the development or
11 release engineers?
12 A I think in the broadest terms of contact, no,
13 because it's -- it is trapped between two pieces of
14 metal and it is always in contact, so just contact,
15 no; it was contact with a specific item that has
16 like, I said a sharp edge or ability to pierce.
17 Those kinds of items where they had contact, we
18 investigated further.
19 Q In your test reports that the test engineers did and
20 then gave to you as the vehicle test -- crash test
21 manager, were the engineers running the tests asked
22 to document things that they saw that they wanted to
23 alert the downstream people to?
24 A If it's -- if you run the test and there's a visible
25 problem, then the guys at the proving grounds,
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1 whether they were the engineers or the union
2 mechanics in build-up and tear-down for that, were
3 instructed to write on their report what they could
4 see. In vehicle crash tests there are a lot of
5 things that you can't see. They get folded, they
6 get compressed, they are hidden from view, and so
7 some of the tests, they'll say, it had a failure, wePage 20
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8 don't know why, and some of them they'll say it had
9 a failure and you can see it without disassembly,
10 and write down that reason.
11 Q Did you ask them, though, typically if they saw
12 something, to note it in the crash test remarks
13 section?
14 A Yeah, if it's visible and you can see it without
15 disassembling -- they were very well instructed not
16 disassemble the vehicle -- then that was in the
17 remarks.
18 Q And the remarks then would include observations that
19 might raise a concern about the vehicle's
20 performance on the test?
21 A They might.
22 Q Were there any particular things that the engineers
23 were asked to note that ran the crash tests?
24 A I think that there wasn't like a list or there
25 wasn't a series of guidelines. I believe that you
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1 rely on the engineer's good judgement and his
2 training to recognize things that were hazardous,
3 and experience basically tells you is it a sharp
4 edge, has it got a point, in terms of the fuel
5 systems, and there are areas where you want to look
6 to see is the vehicle performing the way I intended
7 it to on the structure of the vehicle, did it have
Page 21
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 8 structural things you can tell, did it perform --
9 are the welds connected, you know. These are the
10 kinds of things that an engineer, when they review a
11 vehicle, would look for to determine its
12 performance.
13 Q And then those notes would be -- trigger someone
14 taking a look and seeing whether further
15 investigation needed to occur?
16 A Yeah.
17 Q Okay.
18 A If they were written in the test letter.
19 Q Right.
20 A I'm going to get a glass of water.
21 Q Let me ask you to take a look at a document we
22 marked earlier today. It's Lazarus Exhibit 10. It
23 says Fuel Systems & Impact.
24 A Thank you.
25 Q Have you ever seen this before?
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1 A No.
2 Q Okay. If you would like to take a moment to look
3 through it, do you know who Ginny Fischbach is?
4 A I know Ginny Fischbach.
5 Q Is she someone that you've worked with?
6 A Yes.
7 Q In what capacity?
8 A She was a manager for the truck impact program.Page 22
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9 Q Okay. Is she someone that you interacted with while
10 you were in Impact Analysis?
11 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
12 THE WITNESS: The -- Ginny Fischbach, I met
13 her first when I came to the Jeep/Truck Engineering
14 Group to do impact management.
15 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. And what was -- what was
16 the nature of your interaction?
17 A She was a manager in a parallel program on parallel
18 vehicles and sat about 20 feet from me.
19 Q Okay. I would like you to take a look at this, and
20 I'm going to ask you to focus on a couple of
21 specific pages, but just generally let me know when
22 you've had a chance to kind of flip through it and
23 become familiar with the document.
24 While you're looking, I'm going to go ahead
25 and mark a copy of this document as Estes Exhibit 1.
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 Okay? Having reviewed this document, does
2 it appear to contain test procedures and protocol
3 that existed during the time that you worked as the
4 vehicle crash test manager for the Grand Cherokee?
5 A Yeah. After my cursory review here today, it does
6 appear to contain the same kinds of processes that I
7 ran.
8 Q Okay. And if you look at Proposed Legislation, the
Page 23
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 9 page that has that heading, under 5125, do you see
10 at the bottom bullet point it says, "Rule making not
11 expected until late 1997??
12 A Yes.
13 Q And that would appear to place this document at some
14 time predating 1997. Is that a fair understanding
15 of what we have here?
16 MS. FOGEL: I'm going to object to the
17 form.
18 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Go ahead.
19 A It seems very speculative, but I don't know.
20 Q Is there anything in what you reviewed in this
21 document that appears to you to be a procedure or
22 policy that was not in place in 1994 or '95, '96?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
24 THE WITNESS: I haven't had time to really
25 absorb all of it, and I can't say for sure whether
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 there's anything in here that I did or didn't
2 normally do. I'd like to really read through it.
3 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Yeah. Well, why don't we go
4 ahead and take a break and let you read through it
5 with the understanding that I'm going to ask you
6 that question when we come back from the break, and
7 so I'm going to ask you to point out things that you
8 do not believe were policies or procedures prior to
9 1997, so between '94 and '97, okay?Page 24
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
10 MS. FOGEL: May I hear the question read
11 back again, please.
12 (Record read as follows:
13 "Q Is there anything in what you
14 reviewed in this document that appears
15 to you to be a procedure or policy
16 that was not in place in 1994 or '95,
17 '96?")
18 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay?
19 MS. SPAGNOLI: So we'll go off the record.
20 MS. FOGEL: I'm going to object to the
21 form, and I just want to say also an objection to
22 the form, it assumes things that have not been
23 placed into evidence, and that was my objection to
24 the form.
25 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. Let's go off the
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 record and I'll ask you to take a closer look and --
2 THE WITNESS: Is there any specific areas
3 out of these 30 pages that you want me to really
4 look at?
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, it's actually -- I realize
6 it's a lot of pages, and I think it's 15 pages all
7 together, and it's a presentation form, so it's
8 actually not a lot of information per page, so I
9 really want you to just take a thorough look at it
Page 25
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 10 and tell me if there's something that stands out to
11 you as not being a policy or procedure in place
12 between 1994 and the end of 1996; okay?
13 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
14 2:30 p.m.
15 (Off the record.)
16 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: We are back on the
17 record at 2:32 p.m.
18 MS. FOGEL: I also just want to state an
19 objection for the record that this document was the
20 subject of some questioning by DaimlerChrysler
21 through Robert Banta, and is a document that has
22 been described by the witness as one that he has
23 never seen before. The purpose that we're here for
24 today with regard to DaimlerChrysler's deposition by
25 additional witnesses is to fill in the gaps of the
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 information that the plaintiffs represented
2 Mr. Banta was unable to respond to. To now show a
3 document to a witness that he has never seen before,
4 one which Mr. Banta was able to respond to, is
5 outside the parameters of what we're here for today.
6 That being said, we'll allow the witness answer.
7 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay.
8 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And, again, Mr. Estes, I'm
9 asking you to discuss this document in the context
10 of your position in '94 and '95 and '96 as thePage 26
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
11 vehicle crash test manager for the Jeep Grand
12 Cherokee which is the vehicle involved in this
13 incident and that we're here about, and so now
14 you've indicated off the record that you had an
15 opportunity to review the material that's presented
16 here, and you made a statement before we went on the
17 record and I just want to get that on the record.
18 Having reviewed this document, do you
19 believe that the items in it reflect policies and
20 procedures that were in place during 1994, 1995 and
21 1996 when you were the manager of the vehicle crash
22 test program for the Grand Cherokee?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
24 answer.
25 THE WITNESS: I agree with the philosophy
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1 and techniques that's put forth in this document.
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. If you take a look at
3 Fuel System Design for Safety -- it's page 5126 and
4 5127 --
5 A Uh-huh.
6 Q -- the first bullet point says, "Absolute vs
7 potential test failure." Can you explain what that
8 means?
9 A No. I don't know what exactly she meant there.
10 Q Okay. Do you have -- have you used the term
Page 27
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 11 potential test failure in the course of your work as
12 a crash test manager?
13 A No, no, neither one of those terms is common.
14 Q "The first point under that heading says, "design
15 for zero leakage," and you've told us that was your
16 expectation and guideline for the 301 test, correct?
17 A Uh-huh.
18 Q And then the next bullet point says, "contact with
19 unfriendly surface is unacceptable." Is that an
20 accurate statement of your policy at that time?
21 A Yeah. As I said before, I tried to define
22 unfriendly in a more technical way, but, yes,
23 unfriendly surfaces are unacceptable.
24 Q And then the next point says, "any contact with tank
25 accessories is unacceptable." Can you tell us what
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 that meant?
2 A I've never heard it termed as tank accessories quite
3 that way before, and so I'm unclear exactly what
4 that includes. I would have probably gone for a
5 different description, I think, of what I think it
6 includes, but I wouldn't have said accessories. It
7 sort of seems like it was a garnish more than a
8 required part.
9 Q Okay. What part -- what would you have described
10 instead of using the word accessories, components?
11 A Components, subsystems. There's a fuel pump systemPage 28
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
12 on top. There's a vent on system on top of it, and
13 contact with those is unacceptable.
14 Q Okay. On the next page, under Fuel System Design
15 for Safety, there's a bullet point that says, "Test
16 issues and post test inspection," and the first item
17 on that list says, "check for secondary problem
18 areas." What does that mean to you?
19 A I don't know what she meant to say there.
20 Q Okay. The next item says, "be careful not to
21 discount as 'anomaly.'" Does that have a meaning to
22 you?
23 A That does have a meaning to me. Because of the
24 small sample size in vehicle crash tests, it
25 happened in one car and I never saw it before, some
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 people will say, oh, that's an anomaly in a lot of
2 testing, engineering testing where they have larger
3 samples, sometimes the word anomaly or a flyer.
4 That is a response that as the vehicle crash test
5 program manager you can't allow. If it occurred
6 once in any test, you have to design out that flaw.
7 Q Okay. The next item says, "check for post test
8 springback." Can you tell us what that means?
9 A Metal, especially when in complex shapes, when
10 compressed and deformed beyond its limit, will
11 return to its previous shape once the force that
Page 29
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 12 compressed it or distorted the metal is removed, and
13 you can see like a bow where things bent and
14 touched, and now after the test, they're separated,
15 and you have to look for those areas where in the
16 dynamic crush of the test contact might have been
17 made but is not currently in contact.
18 Q Okay. And where you see those types of contacts
19 that may have occurred during dynamic crush, is that
20 also something that you then follow up and do
21 further investigation?
22 A Yes.
23 Q Okay. And then "inspect for any contact with the
24 fuel system," that seems to be kind of a catch-all,
25 and that is what you're looking for, correct?
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1 A Yes.
2 Q Okay. I'm next going to show you a document that
3 was previously marked as Exhibit 8 to Mr. Lazarus'
4 deposition, and I will mark this as Exhibit 2 to
5 your deposition.
6 A This one?
7 Q Yeah, thank you. I'm going to grab my copy here.
8 This is a Design Guideline - Fuel Supply. It has a
9 date of January of 1999. Have you ever seen this
10 document before?
11 A No, I have not.
12 Q Do you know who Mark Olex is?Page 30
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
13 A No, I do not.
14 Q Okay. Did you provide any input for the development
15 of a written design guideline for fuel systems?
16 A No, I did not.
17 Q Okay. I'm going to ask you to take a look, if you
18 will, at -- under item number -- on the second page,
19 there's a heading Packaging Clearances. Do you see
20 that?
21 A Yes, ma'am.
22 Q And item No. 6 says, "Axle, bumper, shock, strut and
23 unfriendly surfaces." Okay? Are you with me?
24 A Yes.
25 Q Okay. The second sentence says, "No contact should
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 occur between these components and the tank during
2 the impact event." Have I read that accurately?
3 A I believe you have.
4 Q Okay. Is that statement an accurate reflection of
5 the guideline that you operated under while serving
6 as the manager of the crash test program for the
7 Jeep Grand Cherokee starting in 1994?
8 A No, it's not.
9 Q Do you have an understanding of when that guideline,
10 became a guideline, if at all, within Chrysler?
11 A No, I don't. This is the first time I've seen it,
12 and it's dated 1999.
Page 31
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 13 Q Okay. You told us that you left your position as
14 manager of the crash test program for the Grand
15 Cherokee in '98; is that right?
16 A Yes, ma'am.
17 Q And since then have you had any responsibilities for
18 evaluating impact performance on crash tests?
19 A No, I have not.
20 Q Okay. Have you reviewed any documents in
21 preparation for your deposition today?
22 A Yes, I have.
23 Q What did you look at?
24 A I looked at compliance reports and Vehicle Crash
25 Test Letters.
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1 Q Do you have a list of the reports that you looked
2 at?
3 A I do not.
4 Q Do you have an estimate of how many you looked at?
5 A I would guess it would be four or five.
6 Q And do you have copies of the ones that you looked
7 at?
8 A No, I do not.
9 Q When did you look at the reports?
10 A Yesterday.
11 Q Okay. Did you select them yourself or were they
12 given to you to review?
13 A They were given to me.Page 32
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
14 Q Okay. Can you recall any particular test that you
15 looked at? Is there something that you were asked
16 to review and then you have a recollection sitting
17 here today of what test it was and -- that you
18 looked at yesterday?
19 A It was a series of rear impact tests and development
20 and compliance for the ZJ Grand Cherokee.
21 Q Were the tests that you looked at ones where the
22 vehicle had leakage?
23 A Some of them did have leakage, yes.
24 Q And in those cases -- in those test reports that you
25 looked at where there was leakage, did you try and
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1 recollect the test and whether you could recall
2 what -- why there was leakage?
3 A Yes, I did.
4 Q Were you able to do that on any of the tests you
5 looked at?
6 A On some of them I did remember quite specifically
7 what happened in the test.
8 Q Okay. And other than reviewing the test letters
9 themselves, was there anything else you looked at
10 that helped you recall the events of any particular
11 test?
12 A As I stated before, we looked at the test letters
13 and the vehicle crash test request, which is
Page 33
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 14 basically the precursor to the test letter which is
15 after, and the compliance documentation for 1996 and
16 1997.
17 Q Okay. Let's start with the compliance
18 documentation. I'm first going to show you a
19 Compliance Report which we will mark as Exhibit 3 to
20 your deposition. Is this Exhibit 3 that I've
21 presented to you the Compliance Report for the 1996
22 ZJ-body Jeep Grand Cherokee that you reviewed
23 yesterday?
24 A Yes, it appears to be the same.
25 Q Okay. Okay. And just to orient us to what we're
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1 looking at, in this -- in this report you signed the
2 fuel system integrity section as the product
3 engineer on July 12, 1995, correct?
4 A Yes, I did.
5 Q And does this report contain the actual crash test
6 letters and requests for the crash tests that the
7 compliance decision was based on?
8 A It appears to. I haven't gone through all of them.
9 Yes, they appear to be here.
10 Q Okay. And with respect to the vehicle that was
11 being certified as being in compliance with the fuel
12 system safety requirements, this was a 1996 ZJ-body
13 Jeep Grand Cherokee, and there's a description of
14 the vehicle characteristics on the third page of thePage 34
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
15 document; is that right?
16 A Yes.
17 Q In the 1996 model Jeep Grand Cherokee, were there
18 any changes in the frame rails of the vehicle from
19 the prior year model?
20 A I don't believe there was. That would have been
21 brought up in our development, and I don't believe
22 there was.
23 Q Okay. Is that -- if a change in the material or the
24 configuration of the frame rails had been made from
25 the '95 model to the '96 model, is that an item you
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1 would have expected to be documented in the summary
2 here regarding the compliance of the vehicle with
3 the fuel system standard?
4 A If the changes were significant and of a large
5 enough level, they should be listed on this
6 discussion page.
7 Q Okay. If it was a change that would be expected to
8 affect the performance of the vehicle on the crash
9 tests, it would be noted; is that right?
10 A Yeah.
11 Q Okay.
12 A Yes, ma'am.
13 Q And in this case we don't see any reference to any
14 changes in the frame rails between the '95 and '96
Page 35
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 15 model years, correct?
16 A No.
17 Q Am I right?
18 A There is no reference to the frame rails.
19 Q Okay. There is a reference to a change in the fuel
20 return line between the 1995 and 1996 model years,
21 correct?
22 A Yes.
23 Q Do you have a recollection of what that change was?
24 A No, I don't. That occurred before I was there.
25 Q Okay. You mean the change occurred before you were
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1 there?
2 A Yes.
3 Q Okay.
4 A It indicates it had changed in the 1995 model year,
5 and I came on to test the '96 model year vehicle.
6 Q Okay. And this report is the result of those tests,
7 correct?
8 A The 1996 test.
9 Q Right. Now, in connection with the rear impact
10 performance of the '96 Grand Cherokee, if we look at
11 page 6, does that contain the crash tests that
12 supported your verification that the vehicle was in
13 compliance with the standard?
14 A Page 6 contains the two rear impact crash tests that
15 the compliance document relies on.Page 36
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
16 Q Okay. So in the case of the 1996 Jeep Grand
17 Cherokee, am I correct in understanding that you, as
18 the engineer who certified compliance, relied upon a
19 1991 and a 1992 rear impact test?
20 A Yes.
21 Q And those would have been tests performed on the
22 first model year of the Grand Cherokee; is that
23 right?
24 A They appear to be in the first model year. I did
25 not run those tests myself.
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 Q Okay. Did you review those tests before certifying
2 compliance of the '96 model year vehicle?
3 A The vehicles, I did not review. We looked at the
4 film and the electronic data, and I spoke to the
5 engineer before who had written this, Ed Zylik, the
6 early ones, and that was the review that I
7 conducted.
8 Q Okay. And you then gathered and attached the
9 relevant documents from those tests --
10 A Uh-huh.
11 Q -- with your report that you signed in July of 1995,
12 correct?
13 A Yes.
14 Q And if we look in the attachments then, if we first
15 look at test 4561, do you see that if you go -- oh,
Page 37
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 16 the pages aren't numbered, I'm sorry to say, but
17 about midway through, I see the Safety Test, Vehicle
18 Crash Test Letter for test 4561, 30 mile per hour
19 rear barrier impact, if you could find that page.
20 A You're looking at the Vehicle Crash Test Letter for
21 4561?
22 Q Correct.
23 A Yes, I have it.
24 Q Okay. Now, this vehicle, which is one of the two
25 crash tests that you relied upon to certify the '96
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1 Jeep Grand Cherokee as being -- having complied with
2 the 301 rear impact crash test requirement, involved
3 a vehicle that was a C1 pilot, correct?
4 A Yes, ma'am.
5 Q And a C1 pilot is a vehicle that has been built to
6 production but is before the actual production
7 models are coming off the line; is that right?
8 A The -- as I recall, the C1 pilots are what we called
9 line fill, and they were the pilot cars that are
10 first built as you fill the entire plant
11 manufacturing system, and some of them come off and
12 then you use them for a variety of tests.
13 Q Okay. In this case the vehicle had at least one
14 nonproduction condition, and that was the rear prop
15 shaft was one inch short. Do you see that?
16 A Yes.Page 38
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
17 Q Do you have some understanding of what that meant?
18 A Yeah. I think that the tube that connects the
19 transfer case with the rear axle was not as long as
20 it was intended to be in production.
21 Q Okay. And what would that mean with respect to that
22 part's proximity to fuel system components? Would
23 there be more clearance in this vehicle than on a
24 production vehicle?
25 A No, there wouldn't be. That prop shaft is attached
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 to a spline, and what it is is it slides in and out
2 of the spline, and the length of the prop shafts are
3 a dynamic thing right at launch, and they're often
4 changed due to the ride and handling characteristics
5 that the last group that touches the car before it
6 goes into production wants, so the fact that it's a
7 little bit shorter or a little bit longer, it still
8 rides on that spline and it's within more or less
9 the exact same place that it would be, no matter
10 what the length is. It only is how far it rides on
11 the spline of the rear axle at suspension travel.
12 Q Okay.
13 A So when this is at full weight, the vehicle will
14 compress the suspension and it will go as far back
15 on the spline, probably no matter what length it is.
16 Q Okay. Now, if we look at the other test, rear
Page 39
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 17 impact test that was used to certify compliance,
18 4472 -- if you could find the Crash Test Letter for
19 that.
20 A I don't find it in this package.
21 Q Okay.
22 MS. FOGEL: It should be six pages back --
23 no, no, sorry. I didn't mean to interject, but I
24 just saw something with 4472 on it.
25 MS. SPAGNOLI: Yeah, actually it's not the
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1 Safety Crash Test Letter.
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): There is one page of an inter
3 company correspondence dated 12-20-91 that is a few
4 pages past the 4561 letter that we just looked at,
5 and it says "To distribution." Do you see that?
6 A Yes, I do.
7 Q What is this?
8 A This is the dynamic crush analysis from the film.
9 Q Okay. Does this at least tell you what the build
10 condition of the crash test vehicle was?
11 A Yes.
12 Q And do you see that this vehicle for test 4472 had a
13 trailer towing package?
14 A Yes, I do.
15 Q Do you have an understanding of what -- what the
16 trailer towing package involved, what components
17 would be attached to the vehicle?Page 40
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
18 A Yes.
19 Q Can you explain?
20 A The trailer towing package should be a U-shaped
21 bracket that has two arms that go fore-aft along the
22 car on the rear body-in-white rails and a cross
23 piece that has mounted onto it a receiver hitch for
24 a Reese hitch.
25 Q Is it your understanding that with respect to these
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1 1993 model Jeep Grand Cherokees, that the trailer
2 towing U-shaped bracket provided some structural
3 rigidity to the frame rails that assisted the
4 vehicle in meeting the 301 crash test requirement?
5 A Could you repeat that question?
6 Q Sure. Is it your understanding that with respect to
7 the 1993 model Jeep Grand Cherokee that was
8 reflected in this test 4472, that the trailer towing
9 bracket that you've just described provided
10 structural rigidity to the frame rails that assisted
11 the vehicle in meeting the 301 rear impact test
12 requirement?
13 A The trailer hitch provides a structural rigidity.
14 All rigidity is not of a benefit, if it increases
15 the stiffness of the vehicle, and often increases
16 the g forces experienced by the vehicle, because it
17 no longer absorbs the energy through crush, so I
Page 41
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 18 wouldn't want to categorically state that the
19 rigidity assisted it in passing.
20 Q Did you form an understanding that the trailer hitch
21 bracket that was attached to the vehicle tested in
22 crash test 4472 allowed the vehicle to sustain less
23 rear crush and, therefore, allowed the fuel tank to
24 survive the impact without leaks?
25 A The crush is merely transported to another place.
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
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1 When you reinforce the one area of the deck, the
2 energy is still going to be absorbed by the vehicle,
3 and it will be transported to the kick-ups in this
4 particular design.
5 MS. SPAGNOLI: Move to strike as
6 nonresponsive.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Do you need to hear my question
8 again?
9 A Sure.
10 Q Did you have an understanding that the trailer hitch
11 bracket that was attached to vehicle 4472 allowed
12 the vehicle to sustain less rear crush and,
13 therefore, allowed the fuel tank to survive the test
14 without a leak?
15 MS. FOGEL: Can I hear the answer read
16 back, please, also.
17 (Record read as follows:
18 "Q Did you have an understandingPage 42
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
19 that the trailer hitch bracket that
20 was attached to vehicle 4472 allowed
21 the vehicle to sustain less rear crush
22 and, therefore, allowed the fuel tank
23 to survive the test without a leak")
24 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Can you answer my question,
25 please?
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1 A When you put the reinforcing bracket on there, the
2 crush in the vehicle will still absorb the entire
3 energy of the impacting vehicle, the 301 target
4 trailer. The crush in the car will still occur; it
5 just occurs in a different spot.
6 Q And in occurring in a different spot, did it allow
7 management of the crush so that the fuel tank would
8 not be compromised in the test?
9 A The fuel tank is not compromised in either test with
10 or without the trailer hitch, and the trailer hitch
11 doesn't allow for compromising whether it's there or
12 not.
13 Q So is it your opinion based on your review of these
14 tests -- and, of course, we don't have the test
15 report for the 4472 here -- that the vehicle was
16 able to comply with the rear impact crash test
17 requirement without any reinforcement of the frame
18 rail?
Page 43
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 19 A The previous vehicle, 4574, shows that it was built
20 without a trailer hitch.
21 Q I think it was actually 4561.
22 A Okay. Let me find that one.
23 Q Okay.
24 A Does that vehicle have a trailer hitch on it? I
25 think that's the answer to your question. Could you
FREELANCE REPORTERS, INC. (586) 779-1800�
45
1 repeat the question then?
2 Q Sure. Is it your opinion from your review of the
3 documents that we're looking at here for these two
4 tests that the '93 Jeep Grand Cherokee did not
5 require reinforcement of the frame rail in order to
6 comply with the 301 rear impact test requirement?
7 A The '93 Jeep Grand Cherokee did not require
8 reinforcement of the rear frame rail to pass the 301
9 rear impact requirement.
10 Q Okay. If you look at the document for 4472 that
11 we've just looked at, do you see that there's a
12 build condition that says, "Rear axle with track bar
13 bracket shield?" Do you know what that is?
14 A No, I don't.
15 Q Did you have some understanding that that shield was
16 put in place in order to allow the vehicle to pass
17 the 301 rear impact test requirement because there
18 had been tank contact and leaks in vehicles that did
19 not have that shield?Page 44
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
20 A No, I didn't understand that that's the purpose of
21 that shield. Track bars are typically a very
22 friendly surface.
23 Q Did you hear anything when you became manager of the
24 crash test program for the Jeep Grand Cherokee in
25 1994 that the Grand Cherokee had had problems
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1 passing the 301 rear impact test in 1992?
2 A No.
3 Q Did you hear anything about leaks that were
4 resulting in the development crash tests in the
5 Grand Cherokee before it was certified for
6 compliance?
7 A In the '92, '93 time frame?
8 Q Right.
9 A No.
10 Q I'm going to mark as Exhibit 4 a December 3, 1990
11 Status Report, Platform Engineering/Jeep Truck
12 Engineering, 1992-1/2 Model Year ZJ Rear Impact
13 Validation Test. There's a paragraph on the bottom
14 of the first page that I'd like you to read.
15 MS. FOGEL: Before you have the witness
16 read it, would you be so kind as to ask him if he's
17 ever seen it before?
18 MS. SPAGNOLI: Sure.
19 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Why don't you read it to
Page 45
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 20 yourself and let me ask you if you have heard or
21 seen this -- well, first of all, if you've ever seen
22 the document.
23 A No, I've never seen this before.
24 Q Is this a report that would have been available to
25 you when you became manager of the Jeep Grand
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1 Cherokee crash test program?
2 A Typically development tests like this would not have
3 been available to me. It was issued from the
4 Structures Laboratory, and that's -- that is outside
5 of where I was working. The Structures Laboratory
6 is not in Vehicle Development, and this report
7 probably wouldn't have been part of the Vehicle
8 Development documents.
9 Q Okay.
10 MS. FOGEL: Again, I'm going to object to
11 having the witness read sound bites from the
12 document. He's testified that he's never seen it
13 before, and it's outside the parameters of what his
14 deposition is here for today based on
15 representations to the court why Mr. Banta's
16 deposition wasn't sufficient.
17 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, I think he's here
18 today to talk about the performance of the Jeep
19 Grand Cherokee in crash testing. I think I'm
20 entitled to know whether anyone informed him beforePage 46
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
21 he took the job in 1994 that the ZJ rear impact
22 validation testing had demonstrated fuel tank
23 punctures from an unfriendly corner on the track bar
24 mounting bracket in the first model of the vehicle.
25 I'm entitled to know whether that's something he was
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1 aware of when he took over the program, or are you
2 saying that I'm not entitled to know that?
3 MS. FOGEL: What I'm saying is you just
4 asked him if he ever saw that document before and he
5 testified that he didn't.
6 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. Then I'll ask the
7 next question.
8 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Did anyone tell you when you
9 took on the job as manager of the crash test
10 development program for the Grand Cherokee that the
11 program level ZJ vehicle had been subjected to rear
12 impact validation tests to verify conformance to
13 Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 301 and that
14 the vehicle did not meet the FMVSS 301 requirements
15 because the fuel tank was punctured by an unfriendly
16 corner on the track bar mounting bracket?
17 A No. There were probably many changes of the nature
18 like this that I was not told of. Once they're
19 instituted in the vehicle, they become current
20 production intent, they're typically not carried
Page 47
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 21 forward.
22 Q Okay. So the fact that that had occurred in the
23 development of the vehicle before it was put on the
24 market and validated by your predecessor for the
25 1993 model year was not something that would have
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1 been, you believe, felt to be important to bring to
2 your attention; is that right?
3 A It appears to me, based on this document that you
4 have just showed me now, that the fuel tank issue
5 that was caused by the track bar mounting bracket
6 was modified and fixed.
7 Q Okay. And do you know if that modification or fix
8 is the addition of the track bar bracket shield that
9 is referred to in the letter regarding test 4472?
10 A I cannot say that with certainty, but I assume that.
11 Q Kind of sounds like it's connected to that earlier
12 issue; is that right?
13 A Yes, it does appear to be that way.
14 Q Now, if you look further back in the documents --
15 I'm looking at the Fuel System and Static Rollover
16 Summaries -- for the tests that were attached as
17 part of your Compliance Report for the 1996 Jeep
18 Grand Cherokee -- do you see -- can you locate for
19 me the Fuel System and Static Rollover Summary for
20 test No. 4472?
21 A Yes.Page 48
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
22 Q And can you read for me what the post-test condition
23 notes are that were written in that summary.
24 A Not very well. I believe it says, "Contacted by
25 track bar bracket left front corner. Contacted by
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1 differential housing on rear." It's hard to believe
2 that says rear. There's another mark I cannot
3 interpret.
4 Q Okay. And the differential housing would have been
5 forward of the tank, correct?
6 A Yes.
7 Q And the contact by the track bar bracket left front
8 corner is exactly the same type of contact that's
9 referenced in the development report that we looked
10 at, Exhibit 2, correct?
11 A I believe that that's exactly where they added the
12 shielding to prevent the tank from being punctured,
13 yes.
14 Q Okay. And you're assuming that based upon the fact
15 that this note indicates that there was contact in
16 that location?
17 A Yes. That says "The bracket," and on the same side
18 it has, "This bracket has been modified," and then
19 earlier in the design it talks about a track bar
20 shield. I believe they're all the same part.
21 Q Okay. So based on reviewing these documents, am I
Page 49
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 22 correct in understanding that the test 4472, there
23 was contact between the tank and two different
24 components of the vehicle in this test?
25 A That's what's noted in the test summary.
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1 Q Okay. And if you could now flip to the test summary
2 for test 4561, also for this test, also was used to
3 certify compliance of the 1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
4 and we -- have you found that page?
5 A Yes, ma'am.
6 Q Okay. And can you read for me what the notes are in
7 the Post Test Condition next to Tank.
8 A This one says, "Contacts: Bumper, TRK bar, TRK bar
9 BRKT [and] tailpipe, axle."
10 Q Okay. Is that tailpipe comma axle?
11 A I think it is a comma.
12 Q Okay. So in the case of test 4561, which you used
13 to certify compliance of the 1996 model Jeep Grand
14 Cherokee with the fuel system standard, there were,
15 in fact, contacts, multiple contacts between the
16 tank and components of the vehicle; is that right?
17 A It indicates there were multiple areas in contact
18 with the tank.
19 Q We have bumper, the track bar, the track bar
20 bracket, the tailpipe and the axle. Those are five
21 different locations of contact, correct?
22 A Yes.Page 50
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23 Q And then under Straps, can you read what's written
24 there.
25 A It says, "Left J-hook slipped out of slot."
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1 Q What is a J-hook?
2 A There is a hook that holds the strap in place in
3 contact with the body-in-white.
4 Q Does that mean that if the hook slips out of the
5 slot, the tank would become loosened?
6 A It would become -- the straps, when it's in its
7 design condition, hold the tank in place. In the
8 impact test, typically the distance between the two
9 strap ends, which are held with J-hooks one end and
10 a bolt on the other, become foreshortened. There's
11 crush and it would not be unusual for the J-hook to
12 move relative to the body in the slot.
13 Q But it usually doesn't slip out of the slot, right?
14 A It's not -- occurs 100 percent of the time, but it's
15 not unusual for the J-hook to have moved within its
16 slot.
17 MS. SPAGNOLI: Move to strike as
18 nonresponsive.
19 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Is it unusual for the J-hook to
20 slip out of the slot?
21 A The J-hooks slip out of the slot occasionally.
22 Q Is that an acceptable result in a compliance test?
Page 51
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 23 A The J-hooks can be taken out of the slot during the
24 test while still maintaining the fuel tank in its
25 proper place, and review of the film and review of
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1 the electronic data would determine whether that
2 result was or was not acceptable.
3 Q Did you review that film in this case for this test?
4 A I have no specific memory of reviewing that film,
5 but that is how I trained engineers and how I was
6 probably trained when I came on board.
7 Q Okay. Do you know if you actually reviewed the two
8 crash tests that we've been talking about before you
9 certified compliance, or did you rely upon the fact
10 that your predecessor had found those tests to be
11 acceptable?
12 A I would have looked at every film in the compliance
13 documents and relied on the fact that my predecessor
14 had found them acceptable.
15 Q Now --
16 A In the review, you would be looking for things along
17 the lines that would stand out to you that might not
18 have been there.
19 Q Is it correct, sir, that after you certified
20 compliance of the 1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee in July
21 of 1995, that you initiated or suggested that
22 additional work needed to be done to modify the
23 vehicle to improve its performance on the rearPage 52
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
24 impact test?
25 A When we did the '96 Grand Cherokee, they were trying
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1 to introduce a new design for the fuel tank. The
2 subsequent work in '97 was to try to get that fuel
3 tank to pass the compliance tests and the
4 DaimlerChrysler guidelines.
5 Q The work that was initiated to obtain compliance for
6 the '97 vehicle was beyond changing the fuel tank,
7 correct?
8 A There is a suite of changes that came along with
9 that fuel tank change.
10 Q What changes that affected performance?
11 A Performance in what?
12 Q On the 301 tests.
13 A The exact changes, I wouldn't be able to detail
14 them. In a general way, I knew that they included a
15 new kind of tank and a new kind of vent line and a
16 new kind of fuel pump.
17 Q Any other changes that you believe were implemented
18 for the '97 model to improve the performance of the
19 vehicle on the 301 impact tests, rear impact tests?
20 A In the rear impact tests, to get the second vehicle
21 to pass, we added a bracket which was originally
22 part of the trailer hitch onto the '97 Grand
23 Cherokee structures.
Page 53
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 24 Q What did that have to do with the change of the fuel
25 tank?
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1 A The way the fuel tank is manufactured is different,
2 and the way the fill and vent lines are attached to
3 the tank is different, and the way that those fill
4 and vent lines stayed attached to the tank performed
5 differently from the '96 to the '97 model year.
6 Q What does that have to do with the -- a bracket in
7 the frame rail?
8 A The bracket in the frame rail prevented crush, as we
9 spoke before. It translated the crush to a
10 different part of the car and prevented crush at the
11 attachment of the fill and vent lines to the tank so
12 that they would stay attached.
13 Q Where were the fill and vent lines for the tank,
14 what side of the tank?
15 A Left side.
16 Q Isn't it true that with respect to the 1997 vehicle
17 model Jeep Grand Cherokee, that the reason for the
18 track -- I'm sorry, the reason for the frame rail
19 reinforcement was because of excessive crush that
20 you got on a crash test in 1995?
21 A The crush is the same from vehicle to vehicle. What
22 we saw was the performance of the attachment to the
23 fuel line and vent to the tank. That's where the
24 difference was.Page 54
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25 Q You don't have a recollection of having an anomaly,
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1 a test involving a 1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee where
2 you had crush in the frame rail that was more
3 excessive than you had experienced in earlier tests?
4 A No, I don't have any recollection of a change in
5 crush from car to car. There was a change in
6 performance with new parts on it that we were trying
7 to put into the '96 vehicles, but I don't recall
8 anything in crush from vehicle to vehicle being
9 different.
10 Q You don't have a recollection of a test where there
11 was what was described as excessive crush after you
12 certified compliance of the '96 model year vehicle?
13 A No, I don't.
14 Q I'm going to hand you what I'm marking as Exhibit 5,
15 which is a March 2, 1995 memo, and Exhibit 6, a
16 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test Request. Have you
17 had an opportunity to read both of those documents?
18 A Yes, I have glanced over them.
19 Q Okay. Does this refresh your recollection that
20 there was a test of a 1996 production vehicle that
21 had a crush pattern that was quite different from
22 prior vehicles?
23 A Different, I remember that they would -- there was a
24 change in the way it crushed, but it wasn't
Page 55
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 25 excessive.
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1 Q There was excessive fuel leakage in the test that
2 exhibited the different crush, correct?
3 A Yes.
4 Q And where was the leakage from in that tests ZJ8602?
5 A Do you have the Proving Grounds Test Summary for
6 ZJ8602?
7 Q No, sir. I've asked for it and it's not been
8 produced. All I have is the Vehicle Crash Test
9 Request which you can see does not contain any of
10 the information concerning the results of the test,
11 and that's what's been marked as Exhibit 6.
12 MS. FOGEL: I don't believe that's a rear
13 impact crash test, that number.
14 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, counsel, are you
15 testifying?
16 MS. FOGEL: You said that you asked for
17 it --
18 MS. SPAGNOLI: Right.
19 MS. FOGEL: -- and I'm just telling you
20 that I don't think that that was part of the
21 request. I'll go back and take a look and see.
22 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, the Crash Test Request
23 says 30 mile per hour rear barrier. I've repeatedly
24 asked. I've been provided with a request that
25 doesn't contain the results of the test. It's beenPage 56
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1 repeatedly asked for. I've been told I've been
2 given everything.
3 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): So, Mr. Estes, do you know where
4 the leak occurred in crash test 8602?
5 A I don't recall.
6 Q Do you know what the crush was that was different in
7 this 1996 production Jeep Grand Cherokee?
8 A As I recall, the kick ups were almost vertical after
9 the test, which is what I'm trying to remember for
10 this particular test.
11 Q If you look at Exhibit 6, Build Condition, the test
12 8602 was not a test where you were testing the
13 different fuel tank; is that right?
14 A The 1996 co-extruded fuel tank is the description of
15 the new tank, and I think that ZJ8602 was the new
16 tank.
17 Q Okay. The crush that you're referring to in the
18 kick-up area had nothing to do with the different
19 tank, did it?
20 A No.
21 Q Did it?
22 A The crush in the kick-up area did not have anything
23 to do with the specific tank that was in the
24 vehicle.
25 Q So I'm correct?
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1 A Is that what you said, that the tank did not cause
2 the crush in the kick-up area?
3 Q Right, yes. Am I correct?
4 A The tank did not cause the difference in the crush
5 at the kick-up area.
6 Q Okay. So what was going on in this case was a
7 result in the structural components of the vehicle
8 surrounding the tank that led to excessive fuel
9 leakage so that the vehicle in the test did not
10 comply with the standard, correct?
11 A You can't make that leap of faith that the reason
12 for the leakage was due to the performance of the
13 structure until I can see or remember what it was
14 that caused that leakage. The fact that it
15 performed differently, all the vehicles perform
16 within some variation. They have a pattern and
17 sometimes it's a little bit more this way, a little
18 bit that way. To say that the change in that
19 pattern led directly to that leakage, you can't say.
20 Q Well, we know two things about the test from what
21 we've been given. One is that there was leakage in
22 excess of the standard, correct?
23 A Uh-huh.
24 Q And the second is that there was a crush pattern
25 that was quite different from prior vehicles,
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1 correct?
2 A That's the way I described it then, yes.
3 Q Okay. And beyond what we see here, you cannot tell
4 us what it was that caused the different crush
5 pattern in the test vehicle ZJ8602, correct?
6 A I don't remember any causal for that, at the time.
7 Right now I don't remember what the exact cause was.
8 I have a remembrance that one of our tests -- and I
9 believe it was this one -- had a change in the way
10 the pattern was at the kick-ups between the floor
11 and the rear deck. I think that's what I wrote at
12 the time.
13 Q And do you think that that resulting crush pattern
14 allowed greater crush, thereby necessitating
15 structural reinforcements in the subsequent model
16 vehicle?
17 A The car that I'm recalling which -- and as I sit
18 here and think about it, I'm having a little bit of
19 difficulty making sure it was exactly this vehicle.
20 The crush that happened didn't happen around the
21 tank. The tank would have been less crushed if this
22 was the kick-up area geometry that I'm recalling.
23 It moved the vehicle farther up, the rear deck of
24 the vehicle up further and the performance of the
25 rear rails left them perpendicular to the bottom of
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1 the car whereas they're typically not quite that
2 perpendicular. They're actually not that way at
3 all. They're, in fact, crushed rearward back where
4 the tank was, and the one that I remember, which I
5 think is this vehicle, left the rear rails vertical
6 afterwards.
7 Q And can you answer my question whether that crush
8 pattern necessitated a structural reinforcement in
9 the subsequent model vehicle?
10 A No, that crush pattern is not what we were
11 attempting to modify with the reinforcement bracket
12 there.
13 Q Well, what were you attempting to modify with the
14 reinforcement bracket?
15 A The reinforcement bracket on the '97 ZJ was added to
16 prevent the closure of a hole in the rear rail where
17 the fill and vent lines pass through it. It was a
18 pass-through hole.
19 Q So you wanted that hole to stay open so that the
20 vent line and the fuel fill line would not be
21 severed in a crash?
22 A We did not ever see them being severed, but they
23 would have contact from the rail as it would close
24 and deform around it. We wanted to prevent the
25 contact of the frame rail with the fill and vent
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1 lines, and the only way we came up with to do that
2 was to add this reinforcing angle bracket.
3 Q And why did you have the fuel line and the vent line
4 routed through the frame rail?
5 A That's a decision that I didn't make, and -- as a
6 vehicle development test engineer. That was done by
7 the architecture and body-in-white guys to where the
8 fill and vent line would go.
9 Q Do you have an explanation for why they chose to
10 route those lines through the frame rail?
11 A I choose not to speculate on their reasons. I don't
12 know exactly why they did. I would only give you my
13 own personal opinion for what might have been their
14 reason, but what their exact reasons were, I
15 couldn't say.
16 Q Are there any other Chrysler vehicles that you're
17 familiar with that routed a fuel fill line and a
18 vent line through a frame rail, a hole in a frame
19 rail?
20 A None that I'm familiar with, but I don't know the
21 details of all our vehicles.
22 MS. SPAGNOLI: Let's take a short break, if
23 that's okay with everyone.
24 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
25 3:31 p.m.
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1 (Off the record.)
2 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: We're back on the record
3 at 3:37 p.m.
4 MS. SPAGNOLI: I just want to request that
5 we be -- that I be provided copies of the documents
6 that you showed the witness yesterday.
7 MS. FOGEL: Okay. For purposes of the
8 record, everything that was showed to the witness
9 yesterday were already provided to counsel, but I'll
10 identify it for the record, and those were the --
11 those were the Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test
12 Requests for the vehicles for '96 and '97.
13 MS. SPAGNOLI: Can you give me the test
14 numbers?
15 MS. FOGEL: Yes, I can, 5339, 5380, 40 --
16 5441, all the way to the end.
17 MS. SPAGNOLI: Can you just read the
18 numbers for me?
19 MS. FOGEL: 5493, 5890, 5493. Did I say
20 that one already?
21 MS. SPAGNOLI: Uh-huh.
22 MS. FOGEL: 5681, 5789, 5890, 5927, 5967.
23 MS. SPAGNOLI: And were you -- were these
24 just the test requests or the safety -- the crash
25 test letters.
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1 MS. FOGEL: They were the Vehicle Crash
2 Test Letter and the Vehicle Crash Test Request.
3 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay.
4 MS. FOGEL: And the only other thing that
5 was showed to the witness was the memo from March of
6 '95, I believe, that you showed to him already and
7 has been marked as an exhibit.
8 THE WITNESS: And the compliance documents.
9 MS. FOGEL: Oh, yes, and the compliance
10 documents for '96, '97 but not the full set that you
11 marked today. It was just the first couple pages.
12 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. The letters, what we
13 were just talking about, Exhibit 5?
14 MS. FOGEL: I don't have a copy of the
15 exhibits.
16 MS. SPAGNOLI: I'm sorry.
17 MS. FOGEL: That's correct.
18 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Mr. Estes, can I just confirm
19 that in terms of the material that you reviewed,
20 other than this letter which references a rear
21 impact test, ZJ8602, you have not seen the Crash
22 Test Letter for that report in your preparation for
23 your deposition; is that right?
24 A Which report?
25 Q 8602. That was not on the list of what was just
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1 read, correct?
2 A The Crash Test Letter and Crash Test Report is on
3 the list that was just read.
4 Q 8602 was on the list?
5 A The vehicle number, ZJ8602, is on the list.
6 Q The Crash Test Letter for 8602?
7 MS. FOGEL: Can we go off the record for a
8 minute?
9 MS. SPAGNOLI: No.
10 MS. FOGEL: I don't want to testify. You
11 can ask the witness.
12 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, you just read me a
13 list of what you showed him.
14 MS. FOGEL: That's correct.
15 MS. SPAGNOLI: And that did not contain
16 that document.
17 MS. FOGEL: It did not contain that vehicle
18 test number, correct.
19 MS. SPAGNOLI: So the witness is telling me
20 he saw a test letter for VC8602, and I need to know
21 why there's a discrepancy in what you showed him and
22 what he's saying he saw.
23 MS. FOGEL: Fine. Ask the witness to
24 explain.
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Where did you see it?
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1 A The document that you gave me references ZJ8602 and
2 cross references to a vehicle crash test No. 5380.
3 5380 is on the list that you were just read. And I
4 reviewed vehicle crash test 5380 yesterday.
5 MS. FOGEL: I tried to tell you that before
6 but you accused me of testifying.
7 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, you were testifying.
8 THE WITNESS: That's what those first two
9 columns do. There's vehicle build numbers and
10 there's vehicle crash numbers, and it associates the
11 vehicle build number, which when you're in the
12 engineering community, you talk about which vehicle
13 build number it is and then when it becomes a test,
14 it gets a vehicle crash number.
15 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay.
16 A And the vehicle build number is referenced in that
17 letter as ZJ8602, and that goes to the Vehicle Crash
18 Test Letter VC5380.
19 Q Okay. Was there a crush measurement taken for 5380?
20 A I don't remember. Why don't I look through the
21 document and see if it has it here. It's not there.
22 It's not here. I don't have it in the documents in
23 front of me.
24 Q I'm going to mark as Exhibit 7 crash test VC5380.
25 A Thank you. There was a dynamic crush analysis
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1 performed on 53 --
2 Q Tell me what page you're looking at.
3 A This page, ma'am.
4 Q Okay. Signed by Mr. Roberson (sic) and Mr.
5 Carlisle?
6 A Anderson.
7 Q I'm sorry. Carlisle is the second name?
8 A Yes, ma'am.
9 Q Anderson is the first name. And what was the
10 dynamic crush in this test that was measured?
11 A In the test 5380?
12 Q Right.
13 A It shows dynamic crush of 22.3 inches.
14 Q Okay. Where is there a description of the kick-up
15 crush that you were describing?
16 A It's not written down, and that would have been only
17 in what I was remembering.
18 Q So the test report itself does not contain any
19 description of the crush in the kick-up area of the
20 frame rails that you've described; is that right?
21 A Let's see here. In the very last page, there is a
22 photograph, and in that photograph you can see the
23 vertical rail section that I was describing. It's a
24 terrible little photograph, mind you, but this
25 section here is the rail that I was trying describe.
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1 They should be at an angle which is something like
2 30 degrees as they come up in the pre-test state,
3 and here they are vertical. There were photographs
4 taken of that specific area, and attached here to
5 this document.
6 Q Okay. And as you sit here today, you have no
7 explanation for why the unusual configuration after
8 the crash test occurred in that area?
9 A Well, this is what I wanted to see because I wasn't
10 certain when you had asked me before without this
11 photograph to remind me. It looks to me like there
12 were cold welds, and it's hard to tell from this
13 photograph, but those black spots are classic that
14 the car either -- right there, those welds pulled
15 through, or there were welds around it that were
16 missing. You can't tell from this photograph that
17 sometimes the vehicles have welds that are broken in
18 this area, and they're not supposed to break, but
19 when they do, the vehicle performs like this, and as
20 you can see, the gas tank rises up over the
21 suspension and translates more forward, and that's
22 what you get as a result of it. It's actually in
23 geometry sometimes a favorable thing, but it is
24 different than what it is designed to do.
25 Q Are you saying it's favorable if you have weld
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1 failures?
2 A In this case, under the performance of the vehicle
3 in this regard, those weld failures allow it to be
4 less crushed. Now, it's not entirely clear when you
5 look at this other page of photographs, but you can
6 see that the crush has translated for rear impact
7 into the area there by the wheel well, whereas the
8 section around the rear window is typically where
9 the crush occurs, so it's in a different spot. It's
10 moved.
11 MS. SPAGNOLI: Not responsive.
12 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Are you saying it is a favorable
13 result to have weld failures in a crash test?
14 A In this crash test, the particular welds in that
15 area perform favorably to the 301 requirement of
16 leak test.
17 Q So you're saying Chrysler wants the welds to fail in
18 that area?
19 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
20 THE WITNESS: No. The welds are necessary
21 for many other functions in the vehicle. When it
22 performed like this, it was the first time that I
23 had seen it, and that's why I made note of it in the
24 letter, and the first time and the last time that it
25 had occurred, these welds are necessary to the
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1 performance of the vehicle. In the performance of
2 the vehicle in a crash test, they allow a different
3 kind of geometry to be created, which you can
4 interpret as being favorable.
5 Q Did you -- you just said you noted the weld failures
6 in the letter. Where did you do that, sir?
7 A The photographs that are attached to this letter
8 that you gave me.
9 Q No, sir. Where in the test did you note in the
10 letter weld failures in the frame rail?
11 A You can see in the photograph these spots, and
12 that's where I'm seeing it. To have written a
13 description of them, I did not write that into the
14 letter.
15 Q Okay. You just said you noted it in the letter, so
16 that was not an accurate statement; am I right?
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
18 THE WITNESS: The document that you handed
19 me is labeled the Test Letter, and that's where I
20 see them here.
21 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Let me reread your
22 testimony in response to my prior question. You
23 said, "When it performed like this, it was the first
24 time that I had seen it and that's why I made note
25 of it in the letter." You did not make note of the
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Page 69
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 1 weld failures in the letter --
2 A No.
3 Q -- true?
4 A I made note of the -- what exactly did we say? The
5 crush pattern was quite different from previous
6 vehicles, and that is the note that I made.
7 Q And that's not in the letter, correct?
8 A The Vehicle Crash Test Letter, it's not in that
9 letter.
10 Q Okay. There's no mention of weld failures in the
11 Vehicle Crash Test Letter, is there?
12 A I don't believe there is.
13 Q Okay. And you're saying that in this test you
14 believe the weld failures that you can tell from the
15 black and white photocopy of the photograph, in
16 fact, enhanced the performance of the 1996 Jeep
17 Grand Cherokee on the 301 rear impact test; is that
18 right?
19 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
20 THE WITNESS: There are what appear to me
21 to be a separation, and these are -- should be
22 welded, and when that occurred, this shape lifted
23 the gas tank higher than it was in a normal impact
24 test.
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And your testimony is that that
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1 was a good result for this tank in this test?Page 70
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2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
3 answer.
4 THE WITNESS: The result of the tank's
5 movement, it -- I want to say it very clearly.
6 Bringing the tank up and away from the other
7 suspension components does not force it into contact
8 with the axle and the track bar that we had talked
9 about earlier. Lifting the tank has a positive
10 effect of removing it from other objects it may have
11 contacted. That should help the tank perform in an
12 impact test better.
13 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Better in the sense that the
14 tank is less likely to come in contact with
15 something that could cause a leak?
16 A Yes. If you are able to have any part of the fuel
17 system to not be in contact after the crash test,
18 that is a -- the direction of the philosophy of
19 Chrysler in testing it.
20 COURT REPORTER: Of Chrysler --
21 THE WITNESS: Of Chrysler in testing fuel
22 systems.
23 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): We do not want to have contact,
24 as much as possible, and by removing the tank and
25 moving it to a different position, you minimize the
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1 contact, and that minimizing of contact is what I
Page 71
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 2 will technically describe as having been better.
3 You minimize the contact, it's better for the tank.
4 Q And in terms of the Grand Cherokees that you tested
5 and observed having been tested in rear impacts,
6 this was the only test where you got that better
7 result from having the tank move up and away from
8 the suspension components, correct?
9 A The -- this is the only one that I recall that did
10 that. The movement of the tank relative to the
11 vehicle is a design of the kick-up. It's supposed
12 to lift and move the tank. The separation of the
13 rails is what is a different pattern here. The
14 shape of the rails and the forces that are applied
15 to the rails are designed to bend the kick-up over
16 the rear axle and lift and separate the tank from
17 the axle. That's its design intent.
18 When it did it in this particular test, the
19 rails separated, and when they do that, they don't
20 have the same strength, and there was a bend that
21 caused the rails to be vertical post test, and
22 that's what makes it different in this regard.
23 Q Right. And so my question was, that in this case,
24 you got that more favorable result because the welds
25 that ordinarily should have remained intact did not,
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1 correct?
2 A Yes. I think that's my cause and effect analysisPage 72
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3 from looking at these photographs and my memory.
4 Q Okay. And so in production vehicles, you would not
5 expect the welds to fail, and, in fact, they were
6 not designed to fail, correct?
7 A Yes, they were not designed to fail. They should
8 not have failed, and in production vehicles, that
9 shape of the rail post test, it should have a
10 different shape.
11 Q Okay. And that different shape in all of the other
12 Grand Cherokee tests that you reviewed or saw, after
13 the crash, the tank was in closer proximity to the
14 suspension components than in the test where the
15 welds failed, correct?
16 A The weld failure allowed a different kind of
17 geometry. To say they were closer, I don't think,
18 is an accurate statement, because it's almost always
19 in contact, and I don't have any recollection of any
20 one that's not in contact with the axle or the track
21 bar, but it's the degree of contact and the area of
22 the axle and the track bar, how much of the axle and
23 track bar that are in contact that changes from test
24 to test.
25 Q Okay. You've just told us that, am I correct, with
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1 the Grand Cherokee vehicles between 1994 and 1997
2 model years, that you observed either being tested
Page 73
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 3 or you reviewed the crash test reports? Are you
4 telling us that in all of those cases similar to the
5 notes that we saw on the two tests where the vehicle
6 was certified in compliance for the '90 -- based on
7 the '91 and '92 tests, that there was contact
8 between the fuel tank and the rear axle and track
9 bar? Because that may have been a really long
10 question and I'll start it over unless you got it.
11 A In all of the tests that I observed, when you have a
12 rear impact event, the fuel tank contacts the rear
13 axle, and for the most part, contacts the track bar
14 in that it is attached to the axle and goes over the
15 axle. I can't say specifically whether every one of
16 them contacted the track bar, but I would -- I have
17 no memory of any one of them not contacting the
18 axle. I believe every one of them contacts the axle
19 --
20 Q And is that --
21 A -- but whether or not they actually touch the track
22 bar on every single test, I'm not certain that's
23 true.
24 Q Okay. Is it true for the '97 model year, that had
25 the addition of the reinforcement bracket to the
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1 left frame rail, that in the crash test you observed
2 for that model year vehicle, the tank also contacted
3 the axle?Page 74
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
4 A In the '97 rear Grand -- rear tests on the '97 Grand
5 Cherokee, the vehicle contacts the rear axle. The
6 reinforcing bracket actually translates the crush
7 into this kick-up area and causes exactly the same
8 phenomenon to occur to a degree that we were looking
9 at in VC5380.
10 Q Okay, wait. I think you may have misspoken. Let me
11 just be sure. I think you said the vehicle contacts
12 the rear axle. I think you meant to say the tank.
13 A The gas tank, the -- in the crash tests, the gas
14 tank will contact the rear axle. When we added the
15 reinforcing bracket, we moved the crush from the
16 rear rail forward in the vehicle to the kick-up
17 areas to more closely mimic lifting and separating
18 the tank from the axle area that takes the crush
19 from the rear deck and it moves it forward into the
20 kick-up areas. When you do that, it more looks like
21 the test 5380 that was a development test.
22 Q Now, earlier you told us that you added the frame
23 rail to keep the hole in the rail from closing up?
24 A Uh-huh.
25 Q And compromising the fuel vent and fill lines,
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1 correct?
2 A Yes.
3 Q Are you now telling us that an additional design --
Page 75
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 4 A Well, it's a benefit.
5 Q -- goal, benefit, that you actually contemplated and
6 searched for and attempted to accomplish with this
7 bracket was to change the crush characteristics so
8 that the tank would not contact the axle in the same
9 manner as the prior vehicle designs had done in the
10 crash tests?
11 A When we were looking at solutions to prevent the
12 pass-through hole for the fill and vent line from
13 collapsing, there were a variety of things that you
14 could do. When we judged the quality of each
15 solution, one of them was to prevent the hole from
16 collapsing and another one is to enhance the
17 performance of the tank and the system in the crash
18 test. I don't remember predicting before the test
19 that that would occur. I do remember noting it
20 after the test and saying that it was a good thing
21 and an added benefit for the design change of adding
22 the bracket.
23 Q Okay. How did that enhance the performance of the
24 tank?
25 A What it does for enhancing the performance of the
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1 tank is that it removes the number of things that
2 come in contact with it and minimizes the contact
3 with the rear axle and that lower part of the
4 vehicle, and translates the contact to the upperPage 76
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
5 area of the axle which is the track bar itself and
6 away from the track bar bracket, and away from the
7 shock mounts and on to simply the differential, top
8 of the axle, and the nice round rod that is the
9 track bar because it goes above the axle now instead
10 of staying below, and at the level of the axle in
11 the previous crush where it happened in the rear
12 rails and didn't have the kick-up event that now
13 occurs when you put the reinforcing bracket on it,
14 but to say I predicted that, I don't think I would
15 go there.
16 Q Well, when you say that the change in adding the
17 reinforcement bracket enhanced the performance of
18 the tank because it removed a number of things that
19 it came in contact with, what were the things that
20 you believe the tank no longer came in contact with
21 after you added the reinforcement bracket?
22 A The differential is essentially a pumpkin. In fact,
23 it has a nickname of that. When you hit a ball
24 above its centerline, it tends to slide over it.
25 When the gas tank hits the differential on the
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1 centerline, it tends to wrap around it. The tanks
2 are deformable, and I wanted our tanks to skid above
3 the differential and not have as much impact on the
4 differential as they would have if they had stayed
Page 77
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 5 lower, and that is how I think we enhanced the
6 performance of the tank in the test.
7 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Just a few minutes left
8 on the tapes.
9 THE WITNESS: Are we stopping?
10 MS. SPAGNOLI: Less than five?
11 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Less than five.
12 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. We need to go off the
13 record.
14 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
15 4:01 p.m.
16 (Off the record.)
17 (Deposition adjourned at or
18 about 4:01 p.m.)
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
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1 S T I P U L A T I O N S
2
3 IT IS HEREBY STIPULATED AND AGREED by and
4 between the attorneys for the respective parties
5 hereto that all rights provided by the C.P.L.R,Page 78
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
6 including the right to object to any question,
7 except as to the form, or to move to strike any
8 testimony at this examination, are reserved; and, in
9 addition, the failure to object to any question or
10 to move to strike testimony at this examination
11 shall not be a bar or waiver to make such motion at,
12 and is reserved for, the trial of this action.
13 IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED AND AGREED that
14 this examination may be sworn to, by the witness
15 being examined, before a Notary Public other than
16 the Notary Public before whom this examination was
17 begun, but the failure to do so, or to return the
18 original of this examination to counsel, shall not
19 be deemed a waiver of the rights provided by Rule
20 3116, C.P.L.R, and shall be controlled thereby.
21 IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED AND AGREED by and
22 between the attorneys for the respective parties
23 hereto that a copy of this Examination Before Trial
24 shall be furnished without charge to the attorneys
25 representing the witness testifying herein.
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1 FURTHER DEPONENT SAYETH NOT:
2
3
4
5
Page 79
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt 6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13 _________________________________
14 JUDSON B. ESTES
15
16
17 Subscribed and sworn to before me 18 this ____day of _____________, 20___. ___________________________________ 19 Notary Public, _____________ County
20 My Commission expires: _____________________.
21
22
23
24
25
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1 STATE OF MICHIGAN ) ) ss 2 COUNTY OF MACOMB )
3 I, Melinda S. Moore, (CSR-2258), a Notary
4 Public commissioned and qualified in and for
5 the State of Michigan, do hereby certify there
6 came before me on the date and at the locationPage 80
Estes 20050526 Vol I.txt
7 hereinbefore mentioned, the following named
8 person, to-wit: JUDSON B. ESTES, who was by
9 me sworn to testify truthfully concerning the
10 matters in controversy in this cause; that he
11 was examined upon his oath and his examination
12 was reduced to typewritten form under my
13 supervision; that the deposition is a true
14 record of the testimony given by the witness.
15 I further certify that I am neither
16 attorney or counsel for, nor related to or
17 employed by any of the parties hereto or
18 financially interested in the action.
19 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my
20 hand and affixed my Notarial Seal this 20th
21 day of June, 2005.
22
23 Melinda S. Moore, Notary Public 24 Macomb County, Michigan My commission expires: 9-6-2010 25
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DP09-005
MEMO 2-2-2010
ATTACHMENT ESTES 20050527
VOL II
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
83
1 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NEW YORK 2
3 NATASHA AUSTIN AND NICOLE AUSTIN,
4 Plaintiffs,
5 -against- Index No. 10215/00 Volume II 6 DAIMLERCHRYSLER CORPORATION, WESBURY JEEP EAGLE, INC., 7 MARIBEL ORTIZ, AS INTENDED ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE 8 OF JOSE A. SIERRA, DECEASED, GRACE H. EVANS AND LISA N. 9 EVANS, Defendants. 10 ________________________________/
11
12 The continuation of the videotaped
13 deposition of JUDSON B. ESTES, a witness in the
14 above-entitled matter, taken before Melinda S.
15 Moore, (CSR-2258), a Notary Public, at 840 West Long
16 Lake, Suite 200, Troy, Michigan, on May 27, 2005,
17 commencing at or about 8:38 a.m.
18 APPEARANCES: 19 Greene, Broilett & Wheeler 20 BY: CHRISTINE D. SPAGNOLI 100 Wilshire Boulevard 21 Suite 2100 P.O. Box 2131 22 Santa Monica, California 90407-2131
23 Appearing on behalf of Plaintiffs 24
25
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1 APPEARANCES, Continued:
2 Herzfeld & Rubin BY: MAUREEN FOGEL 3 40 Wall Street New York, New York 10005 4 Appearing on behalf of Defendant 5 DaimlerChrysler Corporation
6 Chrysler Corporation Office of the General Counsel 7 BY: GREGORY D. McMAHON 800 Chrysler Drive 8 Auburn Hills, Michigan 48326
9 Appearing on behalf of Defendant DaimlerChrysler Corporation 10
11 VIDEO TECHNICIAN:
12 JAMES WALKER, Reitman Video Specialists (248) 344-4271 13
14
15
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19
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23
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25
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1 TABLE OF CONTENTS
2
3 WITNESS: PAGE:
4 JUDSON B. ESTES
5 Examination by Ms. Spagnoli 89
6 Examination by Ms. Fogel 205
7 Examination by Ms. Spagnoli 209
8
9 E X H I B I T S
10 Deposition Exhibit No. 8 Compliance Report 11 Subject: Fuel System Integrity - 1997 'ZJ' Body, 12 Jeep "Grand Cherokee" Sport Utility 13 Deposition Exhibit No. 9 14 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test Letter 15 VC05967 (DC 00147-161;00222-32) 16 Deposition Exhibit No. 10 17 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test Request 18 VC5199 (DC 04196-4201; 04207-9; 19 04218-19)
20 Deposition Exhibit No. 11 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 21 Test Request VC5208 22 (DC 04401-05; 04411-13)
23 Deposition Exhibit No. 12 Safety Test, Vehicle 24 Crash Test Letter VC05493 25 (DC 03937-41; 03947-49; 03982-84)
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1 EXHIBITS, continued:
2 Deposition Exhibit No. 13 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 3 Test Letter VC05339 4 (DC 03992-3050)
5 Deposition Exhibit No. 14 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 6 Test Letter VC05441 7 (DC 03416-55)
8 Deposition Exhibit No. 15 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 9 Test Letter VC05681 10 (DC 03093-3163)
11 Deposition Exhibit No. 16 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 12 Test Letter VC05789 13 (DC 01996-2068)
14 Deposition Exhibit No. 17 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 15 Test Letter VC05854 16 (DC 04441-4567)
17 Deposition Exhibit No. 18 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash 18 Test Letter VC05890 19 (DC 02071-75; 02082-85; 02144-46) 20 Deposition Exhibit No. 19 21 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test Letter 22 VC05926 (DC 03166-225) 23 Deposition Exhibit No. 20 24 Safety Test, Vehicle Crash Test Letter 25 VC05927 (DC 03228-318)
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1 EXHIBITS, continued:
2 Deposition Exhibit No. 21 3 Fuel System and Static Rollover Summary 4 VC5789
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
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22
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25
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Page 5
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1 Troy, Michigan
2 May 27, 2005
3 * * * * *
4 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Today's date is May
5 27th, 2005, and we're back on the record at 8:38
6 a.m. This is the continued video deposition of
7 Mr. Judson Estes.
8 MS. FOGEL: This is Maureen Fogel from
9 Herzfeld & Rubin for DaimlerChrysler Corporation. I
10 would just like to renew the objection that was put
11 on the record yesterday during the beginning of
12 Steve Lazarus' deposition. We are objecting to the
13 videotaping of the deposition as being not in
14 accordance with the New York Code Rules and
15 Regulations 202.15 with regard to the notice
16 provisions that are stated therein, and yesterday
17 also we had cited to a particular case.
18 We have agreed today to continue with the
19 videotaped depositions since we're all here from New
20 York and California, and that we will visit the
21 issue of whether the videotape portion of the
22 deposition can be utilized with the court on another
23 day.
24 * * * * *
25 J U D S O N B. E S T E S
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1 after having been previously duly sworn by the
2 Notary Public, was examined and testified on his
3 oath as follows:
4 EXAMINATION
5 BY MS. SPAGNOLI:
6 Q Good morning, Mr. Estes.
7 A Morning.
8 Q Have you reviewed anything since leaving here
9 yesterday?
10 A No, I have not.
11 Q Have you had any conversations with anyone about
12 your testimony?
13 A No.
14 Q When you left yesterday, I noticed that you were
15 talking with the attorneys in the parking lot. Were
16 you discussing your testimony?
17 A No, I don't think we were.
18 Q Did you have any discussion at all about what your
19 testimony might cover today?
20 A No. I think we were talking about real estate.
21 Q Okay. So you have not had any conversation with
22 anyone since your testimony started about the
23 questions that I've asked you or the testimony that
24 you've given?
25 A I talked to my wife a little bit about it. Other
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Page 7
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 1 than that, I have not spoken to anyone.
2 Q Okay. Yesterday, when we broke, you were telling us
3 that with respect to your -- well, let me withdraw.
4 We were talking about the reinforcement
5 bracket that was added to the 1997 model Jeep Grand
6 Cherokees as a result of the -- I think you said, as
7 a result of two things. The first was you wanted to
8 keep a hole in the left side rail from deforming and
9 compromising the vent line and the fuel filler line,
10 and, secondly, you said that the reinforcement
11 bracket was installed in order to manage the crush
12 so that the fuel tank would not contact the
13 differential as it was in the earlier models. Am I
14 correct?
15 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
16 answer.
17 THE WITNESS: The way you stated it is not
18 correct. The bracket was installed on the left rear
19 rail to prevent contact with the hole as it closed,
20 not to deform it. The bracket also had the effect
21 of lifting the tank up on top of the differential
22 but it still contacted it.
23 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right. You wanted to change the
24 way the tank contacted the differential from the
25 earlier model?
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1 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You canPage 8
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2 answer.
3 THE WITNESS: The true intent of the
4 bracket was to prevent contact with the fill and
5 vent lines on the body frame rail where they went
6 through.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Are you now changing your
8 testimony?
9 A No, no. That's what we intended to do. It did lift
10 the tank above it.
11 Q And that was a change from the prior models?
12 A Yes. Adding the bracket was a change from prior
13 models.
14 Q In the prior models -- no, the change from the prior
15 model was that the manner in which the fuel tank
16 contacted the differential was different?
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
18 answer.
19 THE WITNESS: Where the tank hits the
20 differential is raised by introducing the side
21 bracket on the left side. That bracket helps the
22 tank rise over the differential. It still contacts
23 the differential, and the contact with the
24 differential is still in the same place on the tank.
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): So the means by which the
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1 bracket affects the differential and fuel tank
Page 9
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 2 contact is that it's not as a direct impact; it's an
3 impact that purportedly allows the tank to not have
4 a blunt force impact with the differential?
5 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
6 answer.
7 THE WITNESS: It allows the tank to slide
8 over the top of the differential.
9 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Instead of blunt force?
10 A It's a round differential and you can't really hit
11 it square.
12 Q Well, it was hitting it square before, wasn't it?
13 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
14 answer.
15 THE WITNESS: It's hard to hit a round
16 thing square. You almost always glance off of it at
17 some level, and the idea is to make it hit it more
18 on the top of the differential. That was a benefit
19 of using the bracket.
20 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Are you saying that the fuel
21 tanks in the '93 to '96 model Jeep Grand Cherokees
22 did not basically wrap around the differential in
23 the rear impact --
24 A Not in every case.
25 Q -- as opposed to sliding off?
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1 A Not in every case.
2 Q Did it do that in some cases?Page 10
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3 A I don't recall.
4 Q Well, then, how can you say not in every case?
5 A Pardon me for a minute. The fuel tank does not wrap
6 around completely the differential. It hits it and
7 some of them hit and slide over it; some of them hit
8 and slide off to the side. The way the tank
9 contacts the differential is test to test
10 independent and changes every one. To say it does
11 one thing or another in every test would be very
12 difficult to say.
13 Q Well, then, how can you say that the addition of the
14 reinforcement bracket was going to change the manner
15 in which the tank slid off the differential?
16 A Well, no, it has helped the differential, and I
17 tried to be clear, that it has helped the fuel tank
18 move in that direction, that it adds a propensity to
19 move the fuel tank in that direction, that we talked
20 a lot yesterday about what I meant by help and
21 aided, and it increases the probability that the
22 tank will slide over the top of the differential.
23 This is what I'm trying to say, is that it's an aid
24 for the tank. It does not make it do that 100
25 percent of the time.
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1 Q You said that the way the tank contacts the
2 differential is test to test independent and changes
Page 11
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 3 every one. How many tests did you do with the
4 reinforcement bracket that allowed you to conclude
5 that the reinforcement bracket would change the
6 manner in which the fuel tank would hit the
7 differential?
8 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
9 answer.
10 THE WITNESS: I don't remember how many
11 exactly. In the most recent review of the data,
12 that's where we would have to read the test
13 descriptions to get a precise number. It was four
14 or five, I think, but I can't remember precisely.
15 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): You think you did four or five
16 tests that had the bracket?
17 A I think so.
18 Q And would those tests note the manner in which the
19 fuel tank hit the differential?
20 A That would be up to the guy at the proving grounds,
21 whether he wrote it down into the data on the Fuel
22 Impact Summary Sheet.
23 Q By 1995 or '96 did you expect that the engineers
24 running the impact tests on the Jeep Grand Cherokees
25 would make a note of contact between the fuel tank
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1 and the differential?
2 A Did I expect them to make a note?
3 Q Right.Page 12
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
4 A No, I guess I didn't.
5 Q Okay. So that's not something that was an issue
6 that needed to be noted in the report to bring to
7 the attention of the development engineers?
8 A No. I don't think that contact between the fuel
9 tank and the axle needed to be noted every time.
10 Q Okay. When did it need to be noted?
11 A The experience of the test engineers as they look at
12 the crash test after the event would tell them if
13 something unusual had happened, and when something
14 unusual or distinct had happened, then that's noted.
15 That's what would be noted. That's a guideline for
16 the notations in the impact test logs.
17 Q We saw in the original tests that were used to
18 certify the Jeep Grand Cherokee as in compliance
19 with the federal standard that the test engineers
20 had, in fact, noted contact between the fuel tank
21 and various components including the axle. Do you
22 recall that?
23 A Yep.
24 Q And so at least in '90, '91, '92, when those tests
25 were run, that was an unusual or unexpected
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1 occurrence; is that what you're telling us?
2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
3 answer.
Page 13
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 4 THE WITNESS: The first question was when
5 did they have to do it. The fact that they did do
6 it didn't mean that they had to make the notation.
7 You could note a lot of different things on there
8 but what you were expected to do is to note the
9 unusual things.
10 It varies by each test engineer what they
11 make notes of, and it varies where the vehicle is in
12 its development cycle as to whether it's unusual or
13 as it progresses through the cycling, and you see it
14 again and again. You go, oh, that's the same thing,
15 I don't have to note it, it occurs naturally in the
16 progress of the test.
17 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): So when was it decided with
18 respect to the Jeep Grand Cherokee that the contact
19 between the fuel tank and the axle and differential
20 was no longer something to be noted in the crash
21 tests?
22 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
23 answer.
24 THE WITNESS: It would imply that there was
25 an actual conscious decision to do that, and I don't
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1 believe that's the case. You will have a group of
2 men looking at the same kinds of tests and after a
3 while, you all begin to recognize that this is a
4 standard pattern. Did we all decide that we weren'tPage 14
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
5 going to write this down today? No, that's not the
6 way those things occur in engineering.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And even though the contact with
8 the tank and the differential became an expected
9 occurrence in the 301 rear impact tests, you still,
10 when you became the manager of the Jeep Grand
11 Cherokee test program, decided to try and do
12 something about it to change that impact and
13 contact, correct?
14 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
15 THE WITNESS: When the changes in 1996 were
16 proposed for the vehicle, that is when we needed to
17 alter the structure of the vehicle to make the new
18 system pass.
19 MS. SPAGNOLI: Move to strike as
20 nonresponsive.
21 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Can you answer my question,
22 please?
23 MS. FOGEL: Have the question read back,
24 please.
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And even though the contact with
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1 the tank and differential became an expected
2 occurrence in the 301 rear impact tests, when you
3 became manager of the Jeep Grand Cherokee test
4 program, you decided to try and do something about
Page 15
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 5 it to change the nature of that impact, correct?
6 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
7 THE WITNESS: I did not decide to change
8 the nature of the impact because I was the new
9 manager.
10 MS. SPAGNOLI: We need to go off the record
11 for a minute.
12 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
13 8:51 a.m.
14 (Off the record.)
15 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: We're back on the record
16 at 8:53 a.m.
17 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): What were the changes in 1996
18 that you had to make in the structure of the Grand
19 Cherokee to make the new fuel system pass?
20 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
21 answer.
22 THE WITNESS: I think that we didn't get
23 around to actually fixing it until 1997 by adding
24 the bracket. Is that the answer that you were
25 looking for? Repeat that question.
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1 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, I'm following up on your
2 statement. You testified that when the changes in
3 1996 were proposed for the vehicle, that is when you
4 needed to alter the structure of the vehicle to make
5 the new system pass. What changes to the structurePage 16
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
6 of the vehicle were necessary to make the new system
7 pass?
8 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
9 THE WITNESS: The proposed system in 1996
10 needed to have the pass-through hole reinforced, and
11 those were the changes we put in. We did not get
12 the changes in till 1996.
13 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): When you say the pass-through
14 hole needed to be reinforced, was there a
15 pass-through hole in the left side frame rail in the
16 '93 to '96 model Jeep Grand Cherokees?
17 A As I recall, there was.
18 Q And so what was the reinforcement of the hole -- let
19 me withdraw.
20 Why was there a change necessary to
21 reinforce the hole for the left side frame rail
22 because of the change in the fuel system?
23 A The new fuel system's vent and fill lines were
24 contacted by the hole when the vehicle was in the
25 rear impact test.
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1 Q Are you saying that had not occurred in the prior
2 tests?
3 A I had not seen it occur in the prior tests.
4 Q Had it been noted in the prior tests?
5 A It had not been noted as far as I remember in the
Page 17
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 6 prior tests.
7 Q And is that something that should have been noted if
8 it had occurred in the prior tests?
9 A The men who observed each test would know what the
10 pattern of crush and contact was. If it was unusual
11 and different and something that they hadn't
12 expected, they probably would have noted it. I did
13 not remember seeing those notes and so I do not
14 think that it occurred. I do not actually see the
15 tests. When you see the films and read the reports,
16 to see that very subtle contact between the fill and
17 vent lines and that hole is difficult, so I did not
18 see it directly and I don't know if it was there.
19 Q Well, when you saw it yourself, you thought it was
20 something you needed to fix, right?
21 A There was the test that we had spoke about earlier,
22 5380, and in that test with the new fuel system, it
23 had a change in the way it behaved, and I wanted to
24 --
25 COURT REPORTER: Excuse me, in the way it
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1 --
2 THE WITNESS: Behaved in the contact, and I
3 wanted to fix that as a result of that test.
4 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. When you say there was a
5 change in the way it behaved --
6 A The body structure and fuel system, the entire testPage 18
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
7 result.
8 Q Because of the failed welds?
9 A I'm not sure whether they were failed welds or they
10 pulled out. I'm not sure exactly what the issue is
11 with those welds. I'm not a weld expert, but the
12 metal there in that film, I remember, it was
13 vertical. That was something new. It had
14 separated. That was something new. And the fuel
15 system had failed. And as a result of those tests
16 where the fuel system failed, we were obligated to
17 change the way the system performed in the test to
18 improve it, and that's when I took on the task, as
19 you can see through the testing, to improve the
20 performance of the vehicle so that that would not
21 occur again.
22 Q Now, in the 5380 test that you talked about, was the
23 failure of the fuel system the fact that the vent
24 line and the fuel fill line that went through the
25 hole in the left side frame rail actually were
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1 severed, causing a leak in excess of the standards?
2 A No, the lines themselves weren't severed, and I
3 would like to refresh my memory for a minute.
4 Q Sure.
5 A Yeah, this is the test that I remember. I just
6 wanted to make sure it was this one. The lines were
Page 19
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 7 not severed. There was a plastic fitting on the
8 tank that had been built as a prototype, as a short
9 run. You know, they make five or ten of them, and
10 that fitting didn't remain attached to the tank, and
11 that's the note in the test letter, and the reason
12 it didn't remain attached to the tank is that the
13 lines and the line -- the fill and vent line hose
14 were pulled and the fitting wasn't properly welded
15 on. As I recall, that extra strength from the
16 pulling and the poor prototype welding separated it,
17 and that's a very large hole in the tank when that
18 occurs.
19 The system can be fixed in a couple ways:
20 One, an improved weld, and, two, to minimize the
21 force that pulls on the fill and vent line, which is
22 eventually what we got around to with the bracket.
23 Q Okay. So, first of all, the statement in the 5380
24 test report says -- and let me mark that. Have I
25 already done that?
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1 A I have it in front of me as Exhibit 7.
2 Q Okay. Exhibit 7, the 5380 test report states under
3 Post Test Remarks, "There was excessive fuel leakage
4 during impact and the subsequent 30 minutes,
5 resulting from partial separation of the vent line
6 fitting from the tank." Have I read that
7 accurately?Page 20
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
8 A Yes, ma'am.
9 Q Now, are you telling us that the vent line fitting
10 separation occurred because of the change in the
11 frame rail's movement during the impact portion of
12 the test? In other words, the frame rail where the
13 vent line and fitting fuel line pass-through moved
14 in such a way that you believe they helped separate
15 the vent line from the tank?
16 A Moved and crushed, and, yes, I do believe that that
17 was one of the contributing factors. Now, that's
18 just my belief, and I think that that's the way it
19 happened.
20 Q Okay. And you also mentioned that you think that in
21 addition to the failed or problem welds in the frame
22 rail that there was a weld issue with respect to
23 where the vent line attached to the tank; is that
24 right?
25 A There was on this tank an issue with the weld where
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1 the fitting is attached to the tank.
2 Q Now, since this is a plastic tank, are there welds
3 with respect to the seals on the tank for the vents?
4 Where does the welding occur?
5 A The welding is a vibrasonic welding system and it's
6 a large plastic plate and it has two male nipples on
7 it, one large, one small, a fill and a vent, and
Page 21
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 8 they vibrate this plastic onto the plastic of the
9 tank with a stamp, and that vibrating welding is
10 supposed to meld onto it. When the manufacturer of
11 the tank produced this very short run, there was a
12 quality control issue with that specific weld. When
13 it broke and separated in this test, we noted that
14 some of the weld was a little thinner where it
15 separated, and it shouldn't have been that way.
16 They went back to the manufacturer and I believe
17 reworked the process. I was not involved in that
18 part of it but we didn't see this issue again in our
19 subsequent series of tests.
20 Q Okay. So let me ask you to confirm for me that in
21 the crash test report for 5380 there is no reference
22 to this quality control issue with respect to the
23 weld on the tank. Am I right?
24 A No, no, because that's not visible post test. That
25 comes about in the tear-down after the test.
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1 Q And where in the test -- where in the -- well, let
2 me withdraw.
3 Does that kind of a post-test tear-down
4 observation get recorded somewhere?
5 A No, there's no formal way to do that at Chrysler.
6 We don't have a written document that does that.
7 You have the one letter that I wrote that was a
8 meeting minutes that recorded my observations forPage 22
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
9 this particular vehicle.
10 Q Right. Can you tell me where in your observations
11 then that were reported you noted that there were
12 weld failures either in the tank attachment for the
13 vent or the weld failures in the frame rails.
14 A What I have written here is, "The test vehicle
15 exceeded the standard for fuel leakage [and] the
16 vehicle crush pattern was observed to be quite
17 different..." That's all I wrote as my notes on
18 that rear impact test here in Exhibit 5.
19 Q So those observations you've been telling us are not
20 recorded, at least in these minutes, correct?
21 A No. That's where they would have been recorded if I
22 had written anything else.
23 Q Okay. Now, and you basically are telling us that
24 the likelihood of observations after an impact test
25 which raised some concerns and may need to be
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1 addressed would not necessarily be found anywhere in
2 the written files of Chrysler; is that right?
3 A The concerns that we had -- and typically that would
4 get written down -- were things that we could not --
5 how do I want to say it? Easily assign cause. It's
6 -- you look at it and you go, it was miswelded. If
7 you look at it and you'd say I don't know what
8 happened, and you make a note of it and try to
Page 23
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 9 pursue, and the issue when the tank separated is
10 clear to someone with engineering background, just a
11 mechanical background to look at it and go, that's
12 why it broke, so typically we would not make a note
13 of that where you could assign it to what looks like
14 a pretty obvious cause.
15 Q Well, you would agree with me that for people
16 looking at what Chrysler and its engineers did in
17 the design of the Jeep Grand Cherokee, that there
18 may have been many things that went on in crash
19 tests that were issues that had to be addressed but
20 they were not put in the written record; is that
21 true?
22 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
23 answer.
24 THE WITNESS: There are many things that
25 engineers discuss and talk about and reveal and fix
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1 in the development of a vehicle that are not
2 documented.
3 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Do you agree with me that
4 a consumer's expectations of safety from the fuel
5 system in a Jeep Grand Cherokee should not depend
6 upon whether or not the welds in the frame rails
7 hold in a rear impact?
8 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. It's
9 also asking the witness for legal conclusions whenPage 24
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
10 you start talking about consumer expectations, but
11 you can answer.
12 THE WITNESS: I expect to be safe in my car
13 when I drive it, and I presume that my expectations
14 are the same as many other consumers. I can only
15 give you my feedback for how I feel when I'm in my
16 car.
17 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, and as an engineer for
18 Chrysler, would you agree that your objective was
19 not to have a fuel system that was marginally in
20 compliance with the standard but that might be out
21 of compliance if there were weld failures?
22 A My objective as a test engineer at Chrysler was to
23 provide a vehicle that exceeded the standard even in
24 the face of variation like some occasional weld
25 failures. I wanted it to exceed the standard. I
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1 did a lot of work. I spent a lot of money. I did a
2 lot of time to make sure that the vehicle, even
3 though this condition occurred once, that if it
4 occurred again, it would not cause the system to
5 fail or even approach the standards.
6 Q Okay.
7 A That's my expectation for everyone else who does
8 that job today, when I put my family in Chrysler
9 cars, which we all drive Chrysler cars, that those
Page 25
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 10 vehicles will perform above and beyond the standard.
11 Q Okay. And one of the ways you expect your vehicles
12 to perform above and beyond the standard is to not
13 have their fuel systems compromised if there are
14 weld quality issues in the manufacture of the
15 vehicle, correct?
16 A I expect that the variation in welding can be taken
17 into account in the modeling and the testing and
18 that it will still exceed the standard in a wide
19 variety of conditions.
20 Q Okay. Now, with respect to the Jeep Grand
21 Cherokee's -- vehicle's construction, do you have
22 any reason to believe that there would be any
23 significant difference between a 1996 Jeep Grand
24 Cherokee and a 1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee?
25 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
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1 answer.
2 THE WITNESS: The only vehicle structure
3 difference in the rear of the car that I recall
4 today is the addition of the bracket on the left
5 rear side.
6 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Do you have any reason to
7 believe that that bracket would affect the stiffness
8 of the vehicle in a significant way?
9 A The stiffness of the vehicle -- I want to be clear
10 about how we define the stiffness of the vehicle.Page 26
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
11 The stiffness of the vehicle in the impact tests is
12 what you're asking me about, the stiffness of the
13 vehicle in a turning maneuver, the stiffness of the
14 vehicle in a trailing maneuver?
15 Q In the tests, in the impact tests.
16 A The stiffness of the vehicle in the impact test,
17 when you add the bracket, it -- you know, I expected
18 it to change it, but there's a way we could -- I
19 mean, if you had the data traces and we looked at
20 the peak g's, you could actually prove whether or
21 not it had increased stiffness. I don't have that
22 data in front of me, but I know my engineering
23 judgement would tell me that, yeah, I expect it to
24 be a little stiffer, but I don't know exactly how
25 much or -- and we would -- I mean, that's a
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1 definable problem but I don't have the data to tell
2 you.
3 Q How would you define that?
4 A I'd look at the accelerometer traces. We put
5 accelerometers on the car. We measure its g forces
6 and you could look at those traces and tell the
7 difference.
8 Q And what would be the effect of a stiffer rear end
9 in a rear impact?
10 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
Page 27
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 11 answer.
12 THE WITNESS: It would be kind of
13 speculative for me. I think that the stiffer rear
14 end, the way that bracket made it, allowed the
15 vehicle to perform, I think, in an improved manner.
16 The occupants themselves is what you're asking me?
17 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): No, I'm not asking about the
18 occupants. I'm asking about the performance of the
19 vehicle in the rear impact as a result of a stiffer
20 construction.
21 A When you say performance, are we talking about the
22 performance to 301 guidelines for fuel leakage, that
23 metric, the performance in acceleration, the
24 performance as measured how? I'm struggling with
25 that.
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1 Q Well, let's start with compliance with the standard.
2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
3 THE WITNESS: The compliance with the
4 standard and the Chrysler guidelines in particular,
5 the compliance to the standard is the same whether
6 or not the bracket is there or not. I think that
7 the bracket enhances the performance of the vehicle
8 with the fuel system contact because of the way it
9 changes the geometry in the test.
10 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Do you believe --
11 A I'm not sure I answered your question.Page 28
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
12 Q Okay. Well, that was a good start. Let me ask you
13 this: With respect to compliance with the standard,
14 you're saying you would expect the vehicle to be
15 able to comply with the standard with or without the
16 bracket, correct?
17 A The vehicle in 1996 should comply with or without
18 the bracket. The vehicle in 1997, because of the
19 change to the fuel system and the systems that were
20 installed, it needed the bracket to comply.
21 Q Well, you've said that a couple times that the
22 changes to the fuel system is what needed the
23 bracket, but there was nothing about the frame rail
24 that changed between the old fuel system for the '96
25 vehicle and the fuel system for the '97 vehicle,
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1 correct? You had the lines passing through the
2 frame rail in both cases, correct?
3 A The lines passed through the frame rail in both
4 cases.
5 Q And what is it about the fuel system specifically
6 that changed that required a change in the frame
7 rail?
8 A The lines that pass through the frame rail were
9 different between '96 and '97. The way they were
10 attached to the tank was different, and the tank
11 itself was different, and it was those lines and
Page 29
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 12 their attachments that I wanted to use the bracket
13 to protect.
14 Q Are you saying that the fuel tank attachments in the
15 predecessor tank were less likely to pull apart
16 because of contact with the frame rail where it
17 passed through the hole than in the tank for the '97
18 vehicle?
19 A Well, they never did in any of the testing, and
20 that's what I can say. I don't know whether they
21 were more likely or not likely, but in the testing
22 that was in place when I got there, they never did
23 fail. When I ran tests with the new tank, I saw
24 this failure and I went about to fix it.
25 Q Okay. So do you know that there was no separation
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1 of a vent or fill line from a tank in a prior test
2 that occurred on a model vehicle before you started
3 doing testing on the Grand Cherokees?
4 A I was never told of it and I did not see it in the
5 films.
6 Q Okay. Well, it could have happened and the
7 engineers decided it was not an unusual or
8 unexpected occurrence, it was something they could
9 fix easily, and, therefore, they didn't need to note
10 it in any reports, correct?
11 A If --
12 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.Page 30
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
13 THE WITNESS: If the separation caused
14 leakage, it would have been noted. If the
15 separation had caused any kind of failure -- I've
16 got to believe that any separation would have caused
17 a failure. That would have been noted. Because
18 there weren't failures in the development of the
19 tests that I saw and recall, I don't think that it
20 occurred, but that all happened before my time when
21 I was there.
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, if there was contact
23 between the lines and the hole in the frame rail
24 that did not cause an actual leak, it would not
25 necessarily have been noted in the test, from what
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1 you're telling us, that occurred before you became
2 manager?
3 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
4 THE WITNESS: I would say not necessarily,
5 no, because that might be just the way it happens in
6 the crash test.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): So --
8 A I don't know, but it might not be necessary.
9 Q Okay. So you can't say as you sit here today that
10 there wasn't the potential for the same kind of
11 failure in the '96 version of the vehicle as you saw
12 in the proposed '97 fuel system in prior tests,
Page 31
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 13 correct?
14 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
15 THE WITNESS: Well, the potential for
16 failure is always there. It's always there. That's
17 why you run tests.
18 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And whether or not there was
19 contact because of the pass through the frame rail,
20 that -- let me withdraw.
21 Apparently your predecessors, if there was
22 contact between the vent line, the fill line, and
23 the hole in the frame rail but it didn't result in a
24 leak, they justified that result in believing they
25 didn't need to do anything to prevent a failure in
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1 that area, correct?
2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
3 THE WITNESS: There's a guideline in one of
4 the documents you showed me where it says contact
5 with an unfriendly surface is something you have to
6 withdraw and fix. The contact between the fill and
7 vent line and this big round hole with rounded edges
8 in it might not have drawn the attention of the
9 crash test engineers at that time. I can see easily
10 in my own mind that if this big round hose that's
11 rubbery goes through this rounded hole, and it was
12 held there after the crash test, it might not be a
13 problem. You'd have to look at that specific carPage 32
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
14 and say what was the shapes and where were the edges
15 at and is there any potential, and that's a
16 judgement call to the engineers to look at that and
17 go, well, you know, it looks okay to me. It's all
18 round; everything there is round. You know, there
19 aren't any sharp edges in that particular set of
20 interfaces. You know --
21 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry, there aren't
22 any sharp edges --
23 THE WITNESS: Sharp edges, and that
24 interface, you know, there's the hose, there's the
25 frame rail, there's the pass-through. Everything on
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1 there is rounded. It's a round hose. It's got a
2 rim on the pass-through in the liner. I could
3 easily see where even if it did pull a little bit on
4 previous tests, they would go, well, you know, it's
5 okay.
6 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Because you wouldn't consider
7 that to be an unfriendly surface?
8 A It was not an unfriendly surface. It's all round
9 stuff and it's a big round rubber hose and it's
10 stretchy.
11 Q And if it was just contact, that wasn't something
12 you needed to be concerned about?
13 A If it was just contact, it wouldn't have been noted.
Page 33
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 14 It wouldn't have been unusual. It wouldn't have
15 been something that you would write down.
16 Q So with respect to what ended up being the '97
17 model --
18 A Okay.
19 Q -- the only change structurally that you're aware of
20 is the addition of this bracket as we've talked
21 about, correct?
22 A Yes, ma'am, that's the only one I recall.
23 Q And would you expect the addition of the bracket to
24 change the crush characteristics in a rear impact?
25 A I actually had hoped it would change the crush
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1 characteristics.
2 Q In the sense that you would -- you've described
3 where the tank would not strike the differential in
4 the same manner as you had seen on the prior test?
5 A Yeah. The intent of the bracket was to prevent the
6 pass-through hole from closing at all on the fill
7 and vent lines, and after the test, we noted that it
8 performed what to us was somewhat in an
9 unanticipated way, that it lifted the tank up and
10 over the axle. It was one of those things that
11 went, well, it did what we thought we wanted it to
12 do and we got this nice side benefit as well.
13 Q And was that -- as a result of that side benefit,
14 did the vehicles that were tested after and with thePage 34
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
15 bracket added to it experiencing less crush than the
16 vehicles that were tested without the bracket?
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
18 answer.
19 THE WITNESS: I don't remember the exact
20 crush numbers. I'd have to look them all up. I
21 think we might be able to do that if we dug through
22 all the stuff, but the exact crush numbers are
23 measured on almost every test.
24 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right.
25 A And could you dig all that up and see if it crushed
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1 different or crushed less.
2 Q Did you expect that it would?
3 A No, I didn't expect to see that number change a lot.
4 That number, it's -- I want to say a high level
5 metric, and based on like the shear forces involved,
6 it's going to be the same. What happens is you move
7 the crush around, and the total crush is kind of the
8 same, so you wouldn't see a change really.
9 Q Well, in terms of crush and the extent of crush, how
10 much would be a lot and how much would be a little?
11 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
12 answer.
13 THE WITNESS: They teach you in engineering
14 school any change over 10 percent in a metric is a
Page 35
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 15 lot. Double digit changes are a lot and you need to
16 look into that. So the metric on dynamic crush is
17 22, 25 inches, so a couple inches would term it a
18 lot.
19 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): A couple inches, two inches,
20 more or less?
21 A Ten percent of the, yeah, the metric. As I recall,
22 dynamic crush on rear impacts is a little bit larger
23 than 20 inches and somewhat less than 25.
24 Q Okay. And so if there were a five-inch change
25 between a vehicle tested that had the same structure
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1 and a vehicle test -- and another vehicle that was
2 supposed to have the same structure, that would be a
3 lot?
4 A A five-inch change --
5 Q Right.
6 A -- in dynamic crush would be a lot.
7 Q Okay. And would you agree with me that with respect
8 to how a fuel system performs in a rear impact,
9 that, again, a consumer driving in a vehicle should
10 not be subjected to a potential failure because the
11 vehicle they're driving is less likely to withstand
12 crush in a rear impact than a similar vehicle that
13 came off the production line?
14 MS. FOGEL: Objection.
15 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Do you understand my question?Page 36
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
16 A No, ma'am.
17 Q Okay. I'll start it over. If there -- would you
18 agree with me that if you have two Jeep Grand
19 Cherokees that come off the production line and one
20 of them had a rear impact test that crushed five
21 inches more than the next vehicle off the line, that
22 would be a concern? Would you agree?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
24 answer.
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): In terms of fuel system
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1 performance in rear impact.
2 A I would investigate where the crush went, and, yeah,
3 if there was -- if there was a five-inch change
4 between two subsequent tests in the car, that would
5 be an unusual event that would send us looking --
6 Q Okay.
7 A -- for an answer.
8 Q And is that because you would hope that the vehicles
9 would not have that significant of a variance one to
10 the next off the production line?
11 A Yeah. I would hope that they don't have that much
12 variation one to the other in the cars.
13 Q Okay. And is that because that type of variance
14 could really dramatically affect the performance of
15 the vehicle in impacts?
Page 37
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 16 A The reason that I would pursue it, I think, would --
17 because I don't like variation in general, and as an
18 engineer you're taught to the eliminate variation --
19 that's what you're after, and because it had
20 performance in impacts, that was my job.
21 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry.
22 THE WITNESS: Because it had a change in
23 performance in impact or could have a change in
24 performance in impact, I didn't want to see that
25 kind of variation. I don't ever remember seeing
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1 that kind of variation, but if there was that kind
2 of variation, I would pursue it. Whether or not it
3 changed the performance, pass or fail, in this
4 impact standard, that's -- if there was that kind of
5 information, as I sit here today, we would have
6 looked at it.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. So, for example, if you
8 have a Jeep Grand Cherokee -- and I think we looked
9 at yesterday the stiffness of the vehicle. Well,
10 let's look at the one you certified compliance for
11 this vehicle. I'm going to give you, first of all,
12 Exhibit 8, which is the fuel system integrity
13 compliance report for the '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
14 and take a look at that, and then let me get my --
15 my secretary doesn't believe in staples. She likes
16 paper clips -- drives me nuts.Page 38
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
17 I'm going to mark as Exhibit 9 test 5967,
18 which I believe is the test which you used to
19 certify compliance of the '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee.
20 And you'll find in here, I hope, the vehicle dynamic
21 crush analysis.
22 A Yep.
23 Q Okay. On this one it's 19.9, correct, plus or minus
24 one inch?
25 A Yeah.
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1 Q So that's the range of expectation you have for the
2 dynamic crush of the vehicle that was certified,
3 correct?
4 A Yeah. This one is a little low, uh-huh.
5 Q So 20 -- so the range here would be 19 to 21 for
6 dynamic crush? That would be an expected range, an
7 acceptable range?
8 A Yeah.
9 Q Okay.
10 A The dynamic crush on this one is lower than I had
11 remembered then.
12 Q Okay. But at any rate, given what you've said is
13 your standard engineering judgement, plus or minus
14 one inch would give us 19 or 18.9 to 20.9 as the
15 range of crush that would be within the accepted
16 margin, correct?
Page 39
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 17 A The analysis has an accuracy of plus or minus one
18 inch.
19 Q Right. And, again, the -- what you had considered
20 to be a reasonable engineering judgement for
21 expected crush on the '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee would
22 be within, let's say, 19 to 21 inches or 18 to 21
23 inches, correct?
24 A The Grand Cherokee's rear impact crush, the way I
25 recall it, was in the low 20's, and this test seems
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1 to be at the edge of that distribution.
2 Q Meaning a vehicle that had less crush than other
3 vehicles you recall testing?
4 A Yes, ma'am.
5 Q And would you agree with me that if the vehicle that
6 you're using to certify compliance is one that
7 experienced on the low end of crush, you would not
8 want a consumer to be exposed to a vehicle that
9 exceeded this -- let me withdraw.
10 Do you agree with me that if a vehicle
11 crush was more than two inches above what you tested
12 and certified as compliant with the standard, that
13 you might have a concern about whether that vehicle
14 would comply with the standard?
15 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
16 answer.
17 THE WITNESS: You know, looking at the dataPage 40
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18 you've given me here about dynamic crush, and in an
19 attempt to reconstruct what I would have thought
20 when I saw this number, now that I have seen the
21 crush patterns from the development tests and this
22 one here in the compliance test, I could see that I
23 would not be alarmed at all to see a 19.9 ring up as
24 dynamic crush, and my reasons for that are when you
25 look back on the series of tests that you gave me
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1 here in Exhibit 5, and I look at the chart of
2 histories for rear crush, rear impacts, I see a
3 19.9, I see an 18.9, I see a 21.2, I see a 22.2.
4 They're all hanging in that same area, so this one
5 here at 19.9, in my compliance test, at the time I
6 would have looked right back at this chart and said,
7 looks like it's in the normal course of events.
8 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Do you know if the tests that
9 are listed on the chart you're looking at had leaks?
10 A That's not indicated here on the chart. We could go
11 back through the data and look.
12 Q Well, is it a pass if it leaks?
13 A It is not a pass if it leaks.
14 Q Okay. Do you know if the leak pass or fail was
15 dependent on how much crush you had?
16 A No, I don't think that it was. There was -- in the
17 '96 and '97's, the mechanism -- there are actually
Page 41
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 18 two mechanisms that were fixed, identified and
19 fixed, and neither one of them really had to do with
20 dynamic crush.
21 Q Okay. So you don't believe with respect to the '97
22 Jeep Grand Cherokee that a change in dynamic crush
23 plus or minus, let's say, four inches would be a
24 reason to be concerned that a vehicle on the high
25 end of crush would not be able to comply with the
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1 standard?
2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
3 answer.
4 THE WITNESS: No. I don't think that the
5 way we measure dynamic crush really has a lot to do
6 with the performance of this fuel system in crash
7 tests.
8 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. So you would be confident
9 that if you took a '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee that was
10 at the high end of those vehicles that you tested
11 and were within the range that came off the
12 production line -- let's mark it at 23 inches -- you
13 would not be concerned that that vehicle would be
14 able to comply with the test; is that what you're
15 telling us?
16 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
17 answer.
18 THE WITNESS: The basis of using dynamicPage 42
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
19 crush to predict its performance in the test, I
20 don't believe, is invalid. I don't think that
21 dynamic crush is a predictor of performance in the
22 test. The 23 inches, we have vehicles that have
23 crushed in that range in the rear impact test, and
24 if I ran one and I got 23 inches, I wouldn't presume
25 to say it would fail. I would look at the test and
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1 I would look at how the systems interacted with the
2 body frame, and those are the indicators that
3 predict whether or not it was on the edge of passing
4 or firmly in the middle of passing.
5 The dynamic crush, the way it's measured,
6 can be a misleading number sometimes the way it's
7 measured. It's -- the dynamic crush doesn't exactly
8 lead you to performance of the fuel system.
9 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): With respect to your
10 understanding of the structural construction of the
11 '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee, would you agree that it
12 would be within the manufacturing tolerances for
13 this vehicle for a '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee to have
14 crush characteristics that would allow up to 23 or
15 24 inches of crush in a rear impact?
16 A I have data here that shows some 22's, some 23's and
17 some 18's, so that appears to be the variation
18 distribution for tests of this weight. You would
Page 43
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 19 really want to look at the weight of the car and how
20 the exact speeds line up. You know, there's
21 variation in the speed of the bullet that hits it,
22 so those are the -- really the contributors to the
23 energy.
24 Q So given your prior testimony concerning engineering
25 judgement as far as reasonable variation, ten
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1 percent, you said, was a lot?
2 A Ten percent is a lot of variation.
3 Q All right. In the case of the Jeep Grand Cherokees
4 that you tested, given the plus or minus 10 percent,
5 do you agree with me that the range you might get in
6 a Jeep Grand Cherokee is anywhere from 16 to 25?
7 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
8 THE WITNESS: I never saw either one of
9 those at the distribution at the ends, but that is a
10 10 percent at each end of it from what we did
11 observe.
12 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. So that would be a range
13 given what you tested of dynamic crush in a rear
14 impact for this '97 Jeep Grand Cherokee?
15 A I'm looking for maximums.
16 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry?
17 THE WITNESS: I'm looking for maximums.
18 Twenty-five at the high end is what you could
19 expect. Sixteen -- 25 to 16, I would say, is aPage 44
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
20 normal range for this vehicle, you know, at the
21 kinds of weight and speeds that we hit it.
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay.
23 MS. SPAGNOLI: Let's go off the record and
24 take a short break.
25 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
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1 9:34 a.m.
2 (Off the record.)
3 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Back on the record at
4 9:44 a.m.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Mr. Estes, if you could look
6 back at what we marked as Exhibit 3, which was the
7 compliance report for the 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
8 and you look at the --
9 A Exhibit 3 in mine is the '96 --
10 Q Oh, I'm sorry. Do you know what, because if you
11 look at the attachments, it says '95, so I'm
12 assuming that that's just a typo then? I'm looking
13 at page 6, the 'ZJ' Body Jeep 'Grand Cherokee' Sport
14 Utility, Summary III.
15 A The dates are all the same. Yeah, looks like a
16 typo.
17 Q Okay. So the three tests that are listed on page 6
18 for fuel system integrity for rear impact were
19 actually the tests that were used to certify
Page 45
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 20 compliance for the '96 vehicle; is that right?
21 A There are two rear impacts on page 6 that were used
22 to comply the car.
23 Q Okay. And those two are 4472 and 4561, correct?
24 A Yep.
25 Q And then if you look at the exhibit that I gave you,
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1 Exhibit 8, which is the '97 model compliance report,
2 and you look at Summary III for the rear impact,
3 there's now, instead of those two tests, there's
4 test 5967 that certified compliance; is that right?
5 A Yes, on page 6 it says 5967 certified rear impact
6 compliance.
7 Q And if you look at the description of the vehicle,
8 is there anything in the discussion section which
9 would suggest that there were changes between '96
10 and '97 that required a new compliance test?
11 A In the summary on page 6, it notes a reinforcing
12 bracket, vehicle model description. Now, which
13 description were you talking about?
14 Q Well, where did you see the reinforcing bracket?
15 A Just a second -- page 6, is it?
16 Q Right.
17 A Six, page 6, description of vehicle 5967, the last
18 line says "MPI engine and reinforcing bracket."
19 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry.
20 THE WITNESS: "MPI engine and reinforcingPage 46
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
21 bracket."
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right. Okay. So does that
23 reinforcing bracket addition, did that in and of
24 itself require a new compliance test?
25 A I thought it was a significant structural change and
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1 required a new test.
2 Q Okay. Do you see on page 1 or 2 where there's a
3 discussion about the vehicle?
4 A Just a second. There's a section here that says
5 Discussion. I guess it's two. It doesn't say on
6 mine, but --
7 Q Did you write that section?
8 A These documents for the most part are cut and paste
9 from the year before, and I issued the document but
10 I don't believe I actually wrote this part.
11 Q Okay. Do you see, though, in the first paragraph it
12 says, "The Chrysler Corporation 1997 'ZJ-74' Body,
13 Jeep 'Grand Cherokee,' Sport Utility vehicle is
14 essentially carryover from the 1997 model?" I'm
15 assuming that's a typo, again, and it should be '96
16 model?
17 A Yep.
18 Q And then it says, "With the exception of fuel filter
19 relocated to the top of the fuel sending unit
20 module." Have I read that correctly?
Page 47
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 21 A Yes.
22 Q And isn't it true that in this portion of the report
23 you are supposed to document any changes that
24 required a new compliance test?
25 A I don't know whether it's supposed to go in this
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1 portion of the report or in the back in the
2 description of each of the test vehicles. I'm
3 unclear as to the exact area I'm supposed to put the
4 description.
5 Q Okay. But you signed both the '95 and the '96
6 compliance report?
7 A Yes, I did.
8 Q And you're telling us you didn't know what you
9 needed to put in each section?
10 A I don't remember now. I might have known it then,
11 but today, to ask me a question where everything
12 goes, I don't remember.
13 Q Well, there's nothing in your description on page 2
14 that carries over to page 3 that suggests that there
15 was a significant structural change in the '97 Jeep
16 Grand Cherokee that required a new compliance test,
17 correct?
18 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
19 THE WITNESS: Well, ma'am, down here in the
20 section where it says, "The rear structure of the
21 'ZJ' is available in four different build levels.Page 48
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
22 The 'ZJ' can have a Trailer Hitch, skid plate or a
23 Reinforcing Bracket and a combination of skid plate
24 and Trailer Hitch."
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay.
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1 A Does it talk about the reinforcing bracket on the
2 '96?
3 Q No, it doesn't reference it.
4 A Well, then I did describe the change there.
5 Q Okay. Did you describe the change as being a
6 significant structural change between the '96 and
7 the '97?
8 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
9 answer.
10 THE WITNESS: I don't remember now whether
11 adding the text was sufficient or did I have to do
12 something else to highlight it. I think -- I think
13 you're just supposed to add the text.
14 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. What you did say was that
15 the vehicle was essentially a carryover except for
16 the fuel filter relocated to the top of the fuel
17 sending unit module, correct?
18 A That's what I said.
19 Q And when you used the word essentially carryover,
20 that means that there is nothing else that is a
21 significant change from the one vehicle to the next,
Page 49
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 22 correct?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
24 answer.
25 THE WITNESS: Given the 25,000 different
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1 parts that go into a car, one extra part which we
2 described makes it different, but it's the same car
3 for most intents and purposes. There are small
4 differences which I hope I captured everywhere, but
5 I don't remember all of them, but it is essentially,
6 in my definition of the word essentially, the same
7 car.
8 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Well, can a bracket be a
9 small change but a significant change?
10 A Yes, it can.
11 Q And is that what you're saying occurred between the
12 '96 and '97 model?
13 A There is the change of the bracket between the '96
14 and '97 model.
15 Q Is it a small change or a significant change or
16 both?
17 A Small is always in scale relative to something else,
18 and relative to the entire performance of the whole
19 car in its all encompassing crash test performance,
20 adding one little bracket to modify the rear impact
21 looks small, but for the rear impact section of it,
22 it is a change that allows difference in performancePage 50
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
23 for that piece of it, but there are 13 other tests
24 that this document does cover, and one of 13 is
25 modified slightly by a bracket that we introduced.
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1 So in my mind it becomes nitpicking over the word
2 essential and the word small. They're there.
3 Q Give me one second. These are out of order. I'm
4 going to mark -- I want to go through some of the
5 other crash tests with you for the '97 vehicle, or
6 actually some earlier ones than that. The first one
7 I'm going to mark is crash test 5199, and let me
8 look at the list that Ms. Fogel read me yesterday.
9 I don't see 5199 on the list of crash tests that you
10 looked at before your deposition, so I'm going to
11 present to you Exhibit 10 and ask you to take a look
12 at that.
13 MS. FOGEL: Do you have a copy of that for
14 me?
15 MS. SPAGNOLI: I only have two. I thought
16 you had all the crash tests with you. Wait. Here
17 it is.
18 MS. FOGEL: I just want to see what you're
19 showing him and then I'll give it back to you.
20 MS. SPAGNOLI: Here's an extra one. Here's
21 an extra one. I got it. It's extra.
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Have you had a chance to
Page 51
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 23 look at that one?
24 A I've reviewed it slightly.
25 Q Okay. This vehicle -- have you seen this test
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1 before?
2 A I don't remember it but it should have been shown to
3 me earlier, yeah. When I started the job, this was
4 one of the ones done just previous to my arrival, so
5 I don't recall, but I should have seen it.
6 Q So you should have seen it back in '95?
7 A Yeah.
8 Q Okay. And how did this 1993 production ZJ modified
9 to represent a '96 fuel system perform in this 301
10 impact test?
11 A It failed the rear impact test due to post-test
12 pressure leaks.
13 Q And where do you see that?
14 A That's documented here under Post Test Remarks under
15 the Vehicle Crash Test Letter, page 2.
16 Q Okay. Do you know where the leaks were that caused
17 the fuel system not to hold the pressure?
18 A I don't recall on this test where they were, no.
19 Q Do you have any idea what was done, if anything, to
20 address the failure of this vehicle on this crash
21 test?
22 A No, I don't. I don't remember.
23 Q Okay. What was the dynamic crush on this test?Page 52
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24 A This was a big one. This is 23.1.
25 Q Okay.
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1 A The speed was also three-tenths of a mile higher on
2 this one.
3 Q Did this vehicle have a trailer hitch?
4 A No. In fact, there's explicit direction to have the
5 trailer hitch and skid plate removed.
6 Q Okay. Was the -- were the '96 -- '93 to '96 model
7 Jeep Grand Cherokees dependent on the presence of a
8 trailer hitch in order to comply with the 301 rear
9 impact standard?
10 A No.
11 Q So you would not have expected a different
12 performance in terms of compliance in the rear
13 impact test between a '93 to '96 Grand Cherokee that
14 had a trailer hitch versus one that did not?
15 A In terms of the compliance as to whether the fuel
16 system passed or failed?
17 Q Right.
18 A It should have passed in either condition, with or
19 without the trailer hitch.
20 Q Okay. Do you know what the '96 fuel system was like
21 compared to what became the '97 fuel system?
22 A I don't really remember the exact details of what
23 was there. As we've been going through this over
Page 53
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 24 the last couple days, I was trying to remember what
25 we replaced, and I'm sure I knew that, but I really
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1 can't remember too much about it now.
2 Q Well, was the '95 fuel system a co-extruded fuel
3 tank like the type of fuel tank that you put in the
4 '97 model?
5 A I don't remember. I don't think so, but I don't
6 remember.
7 Q Well, this says "Proposed 1995 co-extruded fuel
8 tank." That would have been a tank put in a vehicle
9 basically on your watch, right?
10 A This tank, this model, I know about -- oops -- that
11 model and what that tank was, but what was there
12 previous to it, I don't remember.
13 Q You know what the '95 co-extruded fuel tank was
14 like?
15 A Yeah, the proposed one for '95.
16 Q How is it different from the one in '97?
17 A It was a co-extruded plastic tank that was to be an
18 improvement for emissions. What it replaced, I
19 don't really remember, but I know about this tank.
20 Q I'm not asking what it replaced. I'm asking you the
21 difference between the '95 and the '97 fuel tank.
22 A The '95 tank is the one that was in place before I
23 got there, and that's the one I don't really
24 remember its details for.Page 54
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25 Q Okay.
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1 A This proposed tank never made it for '95 and it
2 didn't make it for '96. Its design sibling is the
3 '97 tank.
4 Q Okay. So when it says "'93 production ZJ modified
5 to represent 1996 fuel system," you know what the
6 '96 fuel system is that this is referencing,
7 correct?
8 A Yes. It's a design intent. They want to put it in
9 in 1996 and that's the system which I have some
10 familiarity with.
11 Q Okay. And that's the one you were working on that
12 didn't get in until '97?
13 A Yes, ma'am.
14 Q Okay. So is there -- can you tell us what changes,
15 if any, were made to the fuel system from the
16 proposed '96 fuel system that actually -- into the
17 actual production '97 fuel system? In other words,
18 what happened between this point and when you
19 ultimately got the new fuel system in the '97?
20 A Just to the fuel system itself?
21 Q Correct.
22 A I wasn't the fuel system design and release --
23 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry.
24 THE WITNESS: I wasn't the fuel system
Page 55
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 25 design and release engineer, and the changes that I
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1 recall involve the fuel sending unit. There is
2 what's known as a mason jar on top of it, and it --
3 in one of the tests of which off the top at the
4 moment I don't recall which one, it cracked -- the
5 top of the tank cracked, and we reinforced that. We
6 added little feet to the bottom of it. There were a
7 series of design changes of which I'm not sure all
8 of, but it was the intent to prevent the top of the
9 tank from having a leak in the impact event. There
10 was a series of design changes. I remember the
11 reinforcement and I remember the little feet but
12 there were probably other things in there that I
13 don't recall.
14 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. And, again, with respect
15 to test 5199, in terms of why the pressure check did
16 not hold, you don't have an explanation for that?
17 A No, I don't really know why that one didn't hold
18 pressure.
19 Q Let me mark as Exhibit 11 test 5208. And, again, I
20 don't think this was on the list of tests that you
21 looked at before your deposition, so if you'd like
22 to take a moment to look it over. I'll ask you
23 questions about it.
24 MS. FOGEL: Is this an extra, Christine?
25 MS. SPAGNOLI: Yeah.Page 56
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1 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Have you ever seen this
2 test report before?
3 A I don't remember it but I'm sure I looked at it at
4 the time.
5 Q Okay. This test was run in July of 1994, and so
6 that would have been just before you came to become
7 manager of the Jeep Grand Cherokee test program?
8 A Yeah. It's before I was manager there.
9 Q But certainly it was a test that was attempting to
10 test the vehicle with the modified fuel tank?
11 A Yes, it was a test of the new tank, yes.
12 Q Okay. This is called a 1995 C1 pilot - production
13 built. So does that mean that in all respects
14 except for the fuel tank this vehicle was a
15 production '95 Jeep Grand Cherokee?
16 A That's the description in the test letter, yes.
17 Q Okay. And what happened on this test?
18 A It leaked in excess of the federal limit in the
19 rollover, is what it says in Post Test Remarks.
20 Q Do you know why?
21 A I don't remember this specific one, no.
22 Q So you have no explanation for where the leak came
23 from?
24 A No.
25 Q Okay. It's not noted in the report, is it?
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1 A No, no, it's not.
2 Q Okay. So you can't say that the leak here was from
3 the fuel tank versus something else with respect to
4 the vehicle; is that right?
5 A Yeah, I cannot say that.
6 Q Okay. You can't tell whether this tank leaked
7 because the tank hit the differential or there was
8 contact between the frame rail and the vent and fill
9 lines, correct?
10 A The cause of the leak is not clear.
11 Q Okay. What is the dynamic crush measurement for
12 this vehicle?
13 A This one -- let's see here. This one is lower than
14 the previous one. The speed was lower and the crush
15 was lower -- crush, crush, crush -- this one was --
16 my copy says 19 and there's no digits --
17 Q Okay.
18 A -- smaller than that, so this one looks like 19,
19 but, you know --
20 Q Okay. And you said the speed was lower. The speed
21 here was 30.4 miles per hour, correct?
22 A Yeah, uh-huh. And on my chart, I have -- in Exhibit
23 5, I think this is --
24 Q Right.
25 A -- you gave me -- I've got it listed as 19.9 and
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1 that's what makes me wonder if the photocopy didn't
2 blip off the .9.
3 Q Okay. All I can tell you is this is what we got,
4 and it doesn't have a .9 after it.
5 A Yeah, I know.
6 Q Okay. Next I want to show you test 5493, and I'll
7 mark this as Exhibit 12. And this is one of the
8 ones that counsel showed you the day before your
9 deposition, and this appears to be a test that was
10 conducted with you as the manager of the crash test
11 program for the Grand Cherokee, correct?
12 A Yes, this would have been one of the tests that I
13 ran.
14 Q Okay. This vehicle is a 1996 C1 pilot built vehicle
15 production intent. What does that mean?
16 A When you build the pilots, they're the final tryout
17 of the production system, and that's how you intend
18 to release the car as you go forward, but there are
19 sometimes issues of all sorts in the assembly plant
20 as one starts to build them and they need to get
21 fixed, so the intent is to build it this way. This
22 is a pilot car. We build pilot cars to try the
23 manufacturing system out. That's why it's not as
24 produced but as intended.
25 Q Okay. What fuel system did this vehicle have?
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1 A It does not describe the fuel system as anything
2 different than the 1996 production. There is,
3 therefore, an assumption that it would be in the
4 1996 production system.
5 Q From what you've told us does that mean that the
6 fuel system here is one that was not the new system
7 that you were attempting to introduce for the '96
8 model; it was actually the carryover from the prior
9 model?
10 A That's the assumption that I'm going to make because
11 there is no explicit direction anywhere in the thing
12 that I could see to change the system away from the
13 1996 production intent system that the vehicle came
14 with.
15 Q Okay. And this test, is there any fuel leakage in
16 this test?
17 A Just a moment. Is the crash test letter here?
18 There was no leakage.
19 Q And what is the dynamic crush for this vehicle?
20 A This one says it's 20.0.
21 Q Okay. And was there -- let me withdraw.
22 From what you've told us, this is a test
23 that you would have observed or looked at the films,
24 correct?
25 A Yes.
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1 Q And in keeping with what you've told us earlier,
2 even though it is not noted on this crash test
3 report, your expectation is that the fuel tank would
4 have contacted the rear axle and the fuel lines
5 within the frame rail would have had some contact;
6 is that right?
7 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
8 answer.
9 THE WITNESS: I would have expected that
10 the fuel tank contacts the rear axle, and the fill
11 and vent lines had a contact with their pass-through
12 hole.
13 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Let me show you crash
14 test 5 -- let's do these in timing order here. Hold
15 on one second. This is test 5339, and I'll mark it
16 as Exhibit 13.
17 MS. SPAGNOLI: Counsel, I only have one of
18 these.
19 MS. FOGEL: If I could just look at what
20 you're handing him.
21 MS. SPAGNOLI: Yes, absolutely.
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): While she's looking, I'm going
23 to ask you to go back to 5208, and at the top it
24 says "Hot Test." What does that mean?
25 A The date that the issue of the vehicle test request
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1 is 7-23, and then we wanted it run by 7-26, which is
2 three days, which is a shorter amount of time than
3 typical proving grounds preparation of a vehicle.
4 Q Do you have an understanding as to why a hot test
5 gets run?
6 A There's a lot of reasons. There could have been a
7 need for this test to meet timing and development.
8 I don't know why this test was listed as hot.
9 Q Okay. If in July of 1994 this vehicle is basically
10 a production built vehicle without any significant
11 changes from the prior vehicle models that had been
12 certified in compliance, why would a new 301 test
13 have been run?
14 A The significant difference between this vehicle and
15 previous models was the new fuel system with the
16 co-extruded tank and that's why they ran the test.
17 Q Okay. I thought we had -- maybe that was the other
18 test. This one is one that I thought was with the
19 fuel system that was the carryover.
20 A Well, we're talking about test No. VC5208?
21 Q Yes.
22 A The description on my --
23 Q Oh, you're right.
24 A -- shows the co-extruded tank.
25 Q Okay. So was this 5208 the version of the tank that
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1 you inherited when you were trying to get the new
2 tank to --
3 A It was the design intent. The versions change. You
4 know, after every time they run a test and it
5 doesn't work, they try to fix it and they run it
6 again.
7 Q Okay.
8 A So exact version, probably not, but that intent.
9 Q Okay. Let's look at 5339 which counsel has now
10 handed you. This is Exhibit 13. This a test run in
11 December of 1994, and, again, this test was run at
12 your direction, correct?
13 A Just a second. Yes, I issued the test request.
14 Q Okay. And how is this vehicle -- well, this is an
15 actual 1994 production vehicle, correct?
16 A Yep, that's its description.
17 Q So nothing different in this test in 1994 from the
18 earlier versions from what you can tell from the
19 build condition description; is that right?
20 A There's an interesting note to me here and I don't
21 recall why we did it, but we do have a pressure test
22 transducer in the gas fill vent line, and that
23 strikes me as an unusual piece of instrumentation
24 but I don't know why we did that, so other than
25 that, I do not see a difference why I would have
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1 inserted a pressure transducer in the fill line. I
2 don't see why.
3 Q Is a gas fill vent line the line that you've
4 described previously that goes from the tank through
5 the pass-through hole in the left side frame rail?
6 A Yeah. I think that I'm describing the same line
7 that goes through the pass-through hole.
8 Q And what does a pressure test transducer tell you?
9 A What the pressure transducer should tell you is the
10 change in atmospheric pressure or liquid pressure in
11 the local area of the transducer. There in the gas
12 fill vent line it should tell you the liquid or air
13 pressure.
14 Q Why would that be something you would want to know?
15 A You know, I just don't remember. I looked at this
16 and went, why is that there.
17 Q Well, in general why would that be something you
18 would want to measure?
19 A To measure the pressure inside the vessel would
20 indicate whether the pressure in the vessel was
21 changing during the test.
22 Q Why would that be important?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
24 THE WITNESS: The pressure in the tank, it
25 could be important if it rose a lot. If it changed
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1 a dramatic amount, I guess it could be important. I
2 don't remember much about this transducer or why it
3 was there.
4 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, would it be important also
5 to find out if you are not able to hold pressure?
6 A Yes, that would be important to not hold pressure.
7 That's part of our standard post test --
8 Q And not holding pressure would indicate some type of
9 a potential leak, correct?
10 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
11 answer.
12 THE WITNESS: The post-test pressure check
13 indicates a leak if the post-test pressure check
14 fails.
15 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And in the normal circumstances
16 of the test, do you just check the pressure in the
17 tank or do you also check the vent and filler line?
18 A In the normal rear impact tests, we don't check the
19 pressure at all. This pressure transducer is
20 unusual.
21 Q Okay. And from looking at this test, you cannot
22 explain why that was done in this instance?
23 A No, ma'am, I don't know and don't remember why I
24 added this pressure test transducer.
25 Q Now, in the Post Test Remarks for this December 1994
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1 test, the engineer noted, "That the fuel tank was
2 contacted by the rear axle, the rear sway bar and
3 sway bar bracket, and by the rear exhaust system."
4 Have I read that accurately?
5 A I wasn't on that page. Just a second. The fuel
6 tank was contacted by the rear axle, the sway bar
7 and sway bar bracket, and the exhaust system, that's
8 correct.
9 Q Now, from what you've told us, those are not
10 necessarily unexpected contacts from your experience
11 with this vehicle, correct?
12 A Yes. Those would be normal contacts.
13 Q And this would just be an occasion where the
14 engineer happened to note it even though it was
15 something that had been occurring regularly in the
16 Jeep Grand Cherokee test, correct?
17 A Yep, yep. Let me look who the engineer was. Yep,
18 he just wrote it down.
19 Q Okay. And did you do anything when you got that
20 report to address the fuel tank contact with the
21 rear axle, the sway bar, the sway bar bracket and
22 the exhaust system?
23 A Not that I --
24 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
25 answer.
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1 THE WITNESS: Not that I recall.
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): You didn't recommend any changes
3 to address that contact; is that right?
4 A Not that I recall, no.
5 Q Okay. Can you tell us what the dynamic crush was on
6 this vehicle? I think it's way towards the back.
7 4043 is the page.
8 A This one was 22.2, the relative speed of 30.4.
9 Q Oh, we've already talked about 5380. That's why I
10 was wondering -- so I'm going to put that one down.
11 Let me get 5441. I'm going to mark as Exhibit 14
12 test 5441 from April of 1995, and, again, this is on
13 the list of tests you looked at just before your
14 deposition. Now, this vehicle was also tested at
15 your direction, correct?
16 A Yes, ma'am.
17 Q And it's described as a 1994 production built ZJ
18 Grand Cherokee modified to represent 1996 production
19 for rear impact. Can you tell us what it was about
20 the rear impact changes that were made for the 1996
21 production? In other words, what was it that was
22 different in the '94 production vehicle that was
23 changed to represent the 1996 production intent?
24 A What it says is that there was -- the co-extruded
25 fuel tank with the reinforced sending unit cover,
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1 the steel fuel rails with matching line bundle, the
2 rear liftgate with a fixed glass and a reinforced
3 bumper bar, fascia and brackets for 1996.
4 Q With respect to the co-extruded fuel tank, that's
5 the tank we've already discussed and you said was
6 not actually implemented till '97, correct?
7 A Yeah, this is a design change, this one subsequent
8 to 5380, right?
9 Q Right.
10 A Yeah, and the 5380 is an earlier test and the one
11 earlier we looked at earlier where the top cracked
12 and we've gone back to try to reinforce the top now,
13 and that's noted here. I didn't remember that there
14 were these other changes.
15 Q Oh, I'm sorry. You know, I don't think I did ask
16 you, but can you go back to 5380 and let's talk
17 about it more specifically. Maybe we did cover this
18 and I apologize if I've already talked about it.
19 5380 is the February '95 test that had the partial
20 separation of the vent line fitting from the tank,
21 so we did talk about that. You said you had to
22 reinforce that weld at the --
23 A The weld --
24 Q -- at the tank?
25 A -- on the tank on this one --
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1 Q Okay.
2 A -- was bad.
3 Q So now we're looking at the next test in April of
4 '95, and that reinforced sending unit cover has
5 been --
6 A Tested once, at least once, both on 5380 and now
7 again on 5441.
8 Q And you believe there was something else done to
9 reinforce the vent fitting?
10 A Yes, I believe there was. I recall having a meeting
11 with our design release engineer, and she took our
12 data and the part back over to the supplier, Cotech,
13 to investigate the cause of this welding.
14 Q That had to do with the failure on 5380, correct?
15 A Yes, ma'am.
16 Q Now, in this 5441 test, there's a reference to 1996
17 steel fuel rails and matching line bundle. What is
18 that?
19 A I don't remember.
20 Q The next item says "1996 rear lift gate with fixed
21 glass." Do you remember how that rear liftgate
22 differed from the '95 version or '94?
23 A Somewhere along in here, there's a fixed glass and a
24 flipper glass, and occasionally we make note of it.
25 The fixed glass is, you know, glued in and then
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Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 1 there's a flipper that allows the glass itself to
2 rotate up.
3 Q So you can open it?
4 A Yeah. And I think that we make a difference of --
5 between the two on these tests, and I don't recall
6 anything else different between the liftgates.
7 Q Okay. What about the reinforced bumper bar fascia
8 and brackets, what is that?
9 A You know, I don't remember that at all.
10 Q Okay. Now, if we look at the static rollover
11 summary and the test result, this one had a failure
12 of a leak during the static roll after the impact on
13 the test, right?
14 A Yes.
15 Q And then the note by the engineer says there
16 "appears to be a faulty rollover valve?"
17 A Yes, ma'am.
18 Q What is that?
19 A The tank needs to draw air in to the tank as it uses
20 fuel so it doesn't create a vacuum, and in that air
21 inlet valve, there is like a snorkel, a ball, and
22 when the vehicle is turned upside down, the ball is
23 supposed to seal the valve. In this particular one,
24 I remember we opened it up, looked at the welding on
25 the plate that had failed previously. It was fine,
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1 and then made this special tank for us. The ballPage 70
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2 was missing in the valve, so that when it turned
3 over, the fuel just ran out.
4 Q Okay. Can you tell me if there is a dynamic crush
5 measurement for this test vehicle.
6 A I don't see one attached to this document as given
7 to me.
8 Q Okay. And this is not on your chart, is it?
9 A Let's see here. No, my chart is dated 3-3-95, and
10 this test was run a month later, more or less. Here
11 in the test letter, if you look, it says vehicle
12 velocity and dynamic crush only if requested, and it
13 must not -- either it's not attached or it didn't
14 get requested.
15 Q Okay. Let me hand you Exhibit 15. This is test
16 5681, also on the list of tests that counsel showed
17 you before your deposition.
18 MS. FOGEL: Let the record reflect that the
19 tests that were shown to the witness before the
20 deposition included the Vehicle Crash Test Letter,
21 the Vehicle Crash Test Request, and did not
22 necessarily include some of the other pages that
23 were included in some of these exhibits which
24 include things like dimensions, drawings, and
25 photocopies of photographs.
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1 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. So the things you
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3 request specifically, in each of the tests that you
4 listed for me?
5 MS. FOGEL: To my recollection, yes.
6 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): All right. If you could -- I
8 mean, when you're ready.
9 MS. FOGEL: Let me take a quick look before
10 we hand it to him because I don't have a copy of
11 this. Okay.
12 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. This test is dated
13 November 1995 and it says it's a 1997 USA 301
14 development test, so you're looking at a test of a
15 vehicle that is meant to represent the production
16 1997 vehicle; is that right?
17 A Yeah. It's a '97 production intent vehicle.
18 Q Okay. And it says it is a 1996 production ZJ that's
19 being tested and it has some modifications to
20 reflect the 1997 model; is that right?
21 A Yes.
22 Q And with respect to those changes that affect the
23 fuel system and their performance on a rear impact
24 test, is the 1997 fuel sending unit and fuel tank
25 the only difference between the 1996 production
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1 vehicle and the '97 model?
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3 answer.
4 THE WITNESS: In the description, it states
5 explicitly there was a body-in-white, body --
6 bracket, body-in-white reinforcement under the floor
7 pan for the 1997 design intent, so I believe that it
8 had the new gas tank as described, '97 fuel sending
9 unit and '97 fuel tank design and the bracket on the
10 left side.
11 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. When it says
12 reinforcement under the floor pan, that -- you
13 believe that's referencing the left side frame rail
14 bracket?
15 A Yes, ma'am, it's under the floor pan.
16 Q Okay. And this vehicle had a fuel leak at impact,
17 correct?
18 A Yes, it did, as stated here.
19 Q Does anything in this documentation tell us what --
20 why there was a leak in this test?
21 A Just a minute. Yeah, there's -- I think it only
22 says fuel leak at impact on my copy, but it's an
23 extraordinarily poor copy for those texts.
24 Q Is that for the notes that the engineer wrote?
25 A Yes, the Post Test Fuel System Observations.
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1 Q "Fuel leak at impact more than five ounces?"
2 A Yeah, it does say "more than five ounces" quite
Page 73
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 3 clearly but I'm not quite sure what it says before
4 that.
5 Q And why is a fuel -- what is a fuel leak at impact
6 on the test, because there's a number of stages that
7 you check for leaks; is that right?
8 A Yep.
9 Q So what does a fuel leak at impact tell you?
10 A In the barrier room -- it's an enormous room like a
11 barn -- when the vehicle is hit by the bullet, it
12 began to leak right there. There was no subsequent
13 pressure test; there was no rollover. Leak at
14 impact means that it leaked in the test facility.
15 Q Okay. And you said bullet. You mean the moving
16 barrier?
17 A There's a moving barrier, yes, commonly referred to
18 as the bullet vehicle, but, yeah, it's the type IV
19 301 rear moving barrier.
20 Q Okay. In other words, this vehicle wasn't struck by
21 a car; it was struck by a flat plywood moving
22 barrier?
23 A Struck by the normal required 301 barrier.
24 Q Okay. And was it struck at the test speed of 30 --
25 over 30 miles an hour?
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1 A This one indicates it was struck at speed 30.2.
2 Q Okay. And is that a little low for your test?
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4 Q Now, when it says Post Impact Leakage, it says "At
5 impact greater than five ounces." What is the test
6 requirement for leakage at impact on the 301 test,
7 the standard?
8 A Just a second. It was in -- referenced in something
9 you gave me yesterday. We'll find it in a minute --
10 your Exhibit 10.
11 Q You're looking at the Ginny Fischbach presentation?
12 A Yep, your Exhibit No. 10 that you gave me, it listed
13 the test requirements for leakage and on the page --
14 it says 5124 -- "one ounce (by weight) during impact
15 motion." I believe that was the answer to the
16 question.
17 Q Right. That's the standard that the government has,
18 correct?
19 A Yep, uh-huh.
20 Q And in this case, a greater than five ounce leak
21 would have exceeded the standard, right?
22 A Oh, yes.
23 Q And it also would have exceeded the Chrysler
24 internal guideline --
25 A Oh, yeah.
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1 Q -- which is zero leakage?
2 A Zero leakage.
3 Q Okay. So in this case we had a leak that both did
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Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 4 not comply with Chrysler's requirement nor did it
5 comply with the government test standard, correct?
6 A That's correct, ma'am.
7 Q And then Post Impact Leakage, first five minutes, it
8 says there's another greater than five ounce leak so
9 that's the five minutes the vehicle is sitting after
10 the impact; is that right?
11 A Just a second. I have to find that. Yep, that's
12 what it says.
13 Q And, again, what is the government standard for
14 leakage during the first five minutes after the
15 impact?
16 A The first five minutes is five ounces.
17 Q Okay. So, again, in this instance, the leak after
18 impact in the first five minutes also exceeded the
19 government test standard, correct?
20 A Yes, it did.
21 Q And it also exceeded Chrysler's standard, correct?
22 A Yes, it did.
23 Q Do you have an understanding as to where the leak
24 came from in this test?
25 A In this one, I don't remember.
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1 Q Okay. And there's nothing in the test itself that
2 notes why there was a leak in this test --
3 A No.
4 Q -- correct?Page 76
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5 A No, there's no good memory joggers for me in this
6 test.
7 Q And how much was the dynamic crush in this test?
8 A Just a second.
9 Q Back at the back, 3144.
10 A This dynamic crush is listed at 21.1, and the speed
11 was 30.2.
12 Q The speed was 30.2?
13 A Yes, ma'am.
14 Q Now, since there are no memory joggers in this test
15 report, or all the documentation that I've handed
16 you --
17 A Well --
18 Q -- are you telling me --
19 A -- now that I'm looking through it quite
20 completely --
21 Q Yeah.
22 A -- there's the very, very last page.
23 Q Right.
24 A And even though it's not a very good photocopy of
25 it, I think it's telling me that the lid at the top
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1 of the mason jar cracked again.
2 Q What are you looking at that tells you that?
3 A This is 3163. There's a photograph, and the large
4 white section here should have been a complete
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6 Q Well, why does that tell you there may have been a
7 leak there?
8 A The photograph -- and it's really hard to tell, and
9 like I said, I don't quite remember all of it, but
10 you asked me if there was any evidence as to why I
11 thought this one leaks. I think that this one leaks
12 due to the top of the fuel sending unit again
13 leaking.
14 Q Are you guessing?
15 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
16 THE WITNESS: The photograph indicates that
17 to me.
18 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, the photograph doesn't
19 actually show any fluid leak, does it?
20 A No. It does show here, if you notice, "Post"
21 written on it.
22 Q Right.
23 A And the time and place that this post test would
24 have been taken is after disassembly in the vehicle
25 development garage after we drained all the fluid
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1 out of it.
2 Q Right. And so other than looking at this picture,
3 you have no recollection at all of what, if any,
4 source of leak there was in this test; is that
5 right?Page 78
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6 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
7 answer.
8 THE WITNESS: This picture -- until I saw
9 this picture, I did not remember why this vehicle
10 leaked at all. Looking at this picture, I have a
11 hint that it probably was the fuel sending unit.
12 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): But you can't say that for sure?
13 A No, because I don't remember.
14 Q And if you look at a couple pictures further back,
15 3159, do we see a picture of the fuel tank in
16 contact with the differential?
17 A Yeah, I think you do.
18 Q And do we see that there actually appears to be an
19 indentation in the tank where the tank and the
20 differential come together?
21 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
22 answer.
23 THE WITNESS: I don't think that's the
24 differential causing that dent.
25 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): There's a dent right there,
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1 isn't there?
2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
3 answer.
4 THE WITNESS: Given the quality of these
5 photographs, there's a -- there's a black spot,
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Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 6 right, and I think what that black spot is is where
7 the paint came off. That's what I think that spot
8 is. I don't think it's a dent. That's what I think
9 that spot is.
10 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): In the immediate area of the
11 black spot -- why don't you hold that photograph up
12 for the video camera. Point to what you're
13 referring to as this black spot.
14 A See the little spot here?
15 Q Yep. And is that right at the location where the
16 differential's furthest edge or point is in contact
17 with the tank?
18 A Yeah, it is.
19 Q And do you know if there was a leak there?
20 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
21 answer.
22 THE WITNESS: If there was a leak right
23 there where it could be easily seen after the test,
24 that had a very high probability of being noted. I
25 would expect that any leak right there where you
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1 could see it like this on the lift, someone would
2 have written that down, because this is obvious, and
3 it would have been unusual for it -- on this big
4 round surface for it to have caused a leak.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. If there is contact like
6 that -- and clearly there is contact between thePage 80
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
7 differential and the tank in this picture, right?
8 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
9 THE WITNESS: I can't tell whether there's
10 contact or not. There's no contrast. There's a
11 couple of black dots.
12 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, if the paint was scraped
13 off, then that would suggest there was contact,
14 right?
15 A Yeah, it would. I mean, it suggests it, but to say
16 that there was clearly contact --
17 Q Well, if there was contact but not a leak in that
18 location, that's again an acceptable result?
19 A Yes, contact but not a leak, that's pretty normal.
20 Q That was -- for this vehicle it was normal?
21 A Yes.
22 Q Okay. Are you saying it's normal for other
23 vehicles?
24 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
25 THE WITNESS: I was intimately familiar
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1 with the Grand Cherokee vehicle development and it's
2 normal for this vehicle.
3 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And so you can't say with
4 respect to other vehicles; is that right?
5 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
6 answer.
Page 81
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 7 THE WITNESS: Other vehicles which I was
8 responsible for, it would have been normal.
9 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): What other vehicles were you
10 responsible for?
11 A The Wrangler. It was called TJ. It had the same
12 kind of contact with its rear differential that this
13 one does, similar.
14 Q And the other vehicle that you were responsible for?
15 A The TJ and the XJ, which is a Cherokee.
16 Q And was contact between the differential and the
17 fuel tank normal on the XJ?
18 A Yes.
19 Q Was there anything done on the Cherokee to try and
20 eliminate or reduce the effect of contact between
21 the fuel tank and the differential in that vehicle?
22 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
23 THE WITNESS: Not that I recall.
24 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Five minutes left on the
25 tapes.
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1 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. Let's change tapes.
2 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
3 10:41 a.m.
4 (Off the record.)
5 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: We're back on the record
6 at 10:52 a.m.
7 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): All right. Mr. Estes, just toPage 82
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8 clarify, if we look back at Exhibit 15, there is a
9 clarification apparently or a correction with
10 respect to whether the vehicle tested in 5681 had
11 the left frame rail reinforcement bracket. Have you
12 determined that that was not an accurate description
13 of the bracket that we see here?
14 A Yeah. After a complete review of the build
15 condition for vehicle 5681, I believe I misspoke
16 earlier, and that the bracket and body-in-white
17 reinforcement under the floor pan is not the one in
18 the rear of the vehicle but associated with the air
19 bag electronic control module.
20 Q Okay. So the vehicle that was tested here did not
21 have the left frame rail reinforcement bracket; is
22 that right?
23 A Yes, it does not indicate that reinforcement
24 bracket. It indicates a different one.
25 Q All right. Now, let me ask you to look at Exhibit
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1 16 which is test No. 5789 from January of 1986.
2 Now, earlier when I've asked you if you've seen
3 these before, counsel has pointed out that the
4 documents she gave you in connection with the crash
5 tests were, as previously noted, the Vehicle Crash
6 Test Letter and the Vehicle Crash Test Request but
7 not the attached data including the dynamic crush
Page 83
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 8 report and the photographs or transducer data; is
9 that right?
10 A That's correct. I hadn't seen the transducer data
11 or photographs in some of the reports which are now
12 attached.
13 Q Okay. So what I'm showing you is an addition in
14 each case to the reports that were shown to you by
15 counsel; is that right?
16 A Yes, ma'am.
17 Q Okay. Now, in 5789 the vehicle that we have here is
18 a 1996 production ZJ, again, modified to represent
19 the 1997 vehicle, correct?
20 A Which test?
21 Q 5789, Exhibit 16. Do you have that?
22 A No.
23 Q Oh, sorry.
24 MS. FOGEL: Sorry.
25 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 5789 -- what was
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1 the question again, please?
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): All right. Test No. 5789 from
3 January of 1996 is a test that you requested, right?
4 A Yes, ma'am.
5 Q Okay. It has -- it is a 1996 production ZJ modified
6 to represent the 1997; is that right?
7 A Yeah, it was modified with the new fuel sending unit
8 and fuel tank design.Page 84
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9 Q Okay. So the only difference between the '96
10 production vehicle that you tested that was modified
11 to represent the '97 was that it had the fuel
12 sending unit and fuel tank that was being intended
13 for the '97 model, correct?
14 MS. FOGEL: Object to the form.
15 THE WITNESS: The differences noted here
16 are only the fuel sending unit and fuel tank design.
17 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): So in all other respects, this
18 vehicle was a production 1996 ZJ, correct?
19 A The only differences noted were the fuel tank and
20 fuel tank design on this test letter.
21 Q All right. This test had a leak in excess of the
22 allowable limits in the engine compartment area
23 during the post test static rollover. Do you see
24 that?
25 A Just a second. The Post Test Fuel System
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1 Observations, handwritten, I can't read it, but on
2 the Electronic Test Letter there indicates that
3 there were no fuel leaks at impact or in the 25
4 minutes after impact, but there was fuel leakage in
5 excess of the allowable limits in the engine
6 compartment during the post-test static rollover.
7 Q Okay. Do you know what the source of the leak from
8 the engine compartment was in this test?
Page 85
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 9 A I don't remember this one.
10 Q At all?
11 A No.
12 Q Would a leak in the engine compartment be a
13 violation of the test requirement?
14 A Yes, ma'am.
15 Q Was there anything different in the engine
16 compartment in the '96 production ZJ vehicle that
17 was tested in this test? I'm sorry, let me restate
18 my question.
19 The engine compartment of the vehicle
20 tested was a production 1996 ZJ, correct?
21 A It was a 1996 production ZJ.
22 Q And so you had a failure in the engine compartment
23 which was a production engine compartment, correct?
24 A It would appear to me that that is true. The only
25 other thing that I wanted to say is when the first
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1 of these style of tests came, the original
2 description was for a new steel fuel rail, the
3 matching line bundle, and then that description
4 falls off and isn't repeated, and I don't recall
5 whether that should have been repeated and carried
6 forward or was just implicit in the fuel tank and
7 sending unit design, so I can't say for certain
8 whether it was exactly a '96 production fuel system
9 in the engine compartment.Page 86
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10 Q Are you guessing?
11 A I think that the way I used to do things would have
12 implied that the changes went with this fuel tank
13 and sending unit, but I can't be sure.
14 Q Well, sir, you agree with me that the build
15 condition is supposed to represent the actual
16 condition of the vehicle that you tested including
17 any differences from a production vehicle, correct?
18 A Yes, ma'am.
19 Q And you would agree with me that test 5789 does not
20 indicate any production changes in the test vehicle
21 from a 1996 production ZJ with respect to the engine
22 compartment, correct?
23 A No, it doesn't indicate that explicitly.
24 Q Okay. And this test, because of the leak in the
25 fuel system in the engine compartment, this is a
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1 failure of the government standard, correct?
2 A Yes, it is.
3 Q Was this test reported to the government?
4 A No, it was not as far as I remember.
5 Q The dynamic crush on this test is 20 inches, if I'm
6 looking at page 2050, correct?
7 A Yes, dynamic crush on this one was 20.0 at 30 miles
8 an hour.
9 Q Okay. Now, if you have a production vehicle that is
Page 87
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 10 involved in a test that fails the government
11 standard, you have a requirement to report it to the
12 government, do you not?
13 A I don't remember. I don't think so.
14 Q You don't think Chrysler has to report failures of
15 production vehicles in 301 compliance tests?
16 A I don't believe this was a compliance test.
17 Q It was a test on a production vehicle that failed
18 the government standard 301 test, correct?
19 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
20 THE WITNESS: It was a production vehicle
21 with 1997 fuel system and fuel tank design at the
22 minimum change to represent '97 production intent.
23 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right. And you would agree with
24 me that the fuel tank and fuel sending unit were not
25 the reason for the failure on this test, correct?
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1 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
2 THE WITNESS: They're not in the engine
3 compartment which the only note here says that's
4 where the leak occurred.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right. And if this was a
6 production vehicle with a production engine that
7 failed a 301 barrier test and failed the government
8 standard, you're telling me you don't know whether
9 or not that is a test that needs to be reported to
10 the government?Page 88
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11 A The engine itself was likely to be production. What
12 I am unsure of is whether when we changed the fuel
13 sending unit and the fuel tank design if we didn't
14 take with that fuel system change the whole fuel
15 system as described previously, so I can't say
16 exactly whether or not it should have been reported.
17 I don't believe that it was reported.
18 Q Well, if it was not -- if it was a vehicle that was
19 production in all senses with respect to the engine
20 compartment and there was a failure, meaning it did
21 not comply with the government standard, would that
22 require you to report the test to the government?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
24 answer.
25 THE WITNESS: I don't know right now as I
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1 sit here whether that's the way that works out.
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay.
3 A I don't remember the intricacies.
4 Q And by suggesting that maybe there were some changes
5 in this vehicle that are not reflected on the build
6 condition, is that a means for you to justify not
7 reporting this test to the government?
8 A The changes that are written on the build condition,
9 I think, would have been shorthand for changing the
10 fuel system. Whether or not they're justification,
Page 89
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 11 I don't remember this failure mode and I don't
12 remember the occurrence at that time, so exactly
13 what it was that went through our mind as to whether
14 we justified not calling or calling our Safety
15 Office to report it, I can't say.
16 Q Well, certainly someone would have had to discuss
17 this test and the fact that you failed the
18 government standard, correct?
19 A This test did fail the government standard.
20 Q And rather than just passing by this test, people
21 would have had to have talked about it, right?
22 A Yes.
23 Q And would have had to justify what to do in response
24 to the failure of this '96 production ZJ with a new
25 fuel tank and sending unit not being required to
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1 report the result to the government, right?
2 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
3 answer.
4 THE WITNESS: There was almost certainly
5 some discussion about this test and its failure. I
6 don't remember specifically why this one failed. As
7 I've sat here -- and I'm trying to look through the
8 photographs to see if this is the specific test in
9 my memory that there was a fuel rail contact with
10 body-in-white at the plenum area. I can't say
11 whether that was this one or another one. In thePage 90
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12 photographs I had hoped to see a picture of it, but
13 I don't, and so I can't recall the exact mechanism
14 as to why this one leaked in the engine compartment.
15 MS. FOGEL: I don't have a copy of the
16 exhibit. Does that include the Fuel System and
17 Static Rollover Summary?
18 MS. SPAGNOLI: Absolutely.
19 THE WITNESS: Yeah, it does.
20 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): So was this occurrence a failure
21 of a government standard on a production vehicle a
22 common occurrence?
23 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
24 THE WITNESS: No. The production vehicles
25 did not fail the government standard. This failure
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1 is unusual and it was noted as an unusual failure in
2 the post-test letter.
3 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And what was done about it is
4 something that just does not register in your brain
5 at this point in time; is that what you're saying?
6 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
7 THE WITNESS: There was a change to the
8 plenum to allow more space for a fuel rail to
9 translate rearward in the car. I can't recall
10 whether this vehicle was the one that had this
11 change in it or caused that change. I remember
Page 91
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 12 having the fuel rail in our vehicles contact the
13 plenum area and changing the body-in-white to
14 prevent that, but whether it was this test or
15 another, I'm not sure.
16 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): But with respect to this
17 specific test, you cannot explain what, if anything,
18 was done with respect to a decision about whether
19 this test required a report to the government; is
20 that right?
21 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
22 THE WITNESS: With respect to this specific
23 test, I don't recall the decision or the discussion
24 around the decision as to why we did or didn't call
25 the Safety Office and our government reporting. I
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1 don't remember.
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Can I ask you to take a look at
3 Exhibit 17, please.
4 MS. FOGEL: I have it right here.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): This is test 5854, a 1997 301
6 development test on a 1996 production ZJ modified to
7 represent the 1997, correct?
8 A Yes, it's a modified 1996.
9 Q And it's a test from March of 1996, correct?
10 A Yes, it is.
11 Q This is a test that you requested, correct?
12 A Just a second. Yes, it is.Page 92
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13 Q And there is a 1997 fuel sending unit, a 1997 fuel
14 tank design in this vehicle, as well, similar to the
15 last vehicle, correct?
16 A It has the same description as the previous test
17 5789.
18 Q Is this a test that you were shown yesterday or the
19 day before?
20 A It should have been but I don't remember it
21 specifically.
22 Q I don't see it on the list that was read to me.
23 MS. SPAGNOLI: Perhaps counsel could
24 confirm whether 5854, any portion of that test was
25 shown to the witness the day before yesterday.
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1 MS. FOGEL: This is one of the tests for
2 1997, and I believe it was.
3 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. When you read me the
4 list, I asked you to tell me the numbers of the
5 tests that you showed the witness, and I have 5339,
6 5380, 5441, 5493, 5890, 5993, 5681, 5789, 5890, 5926
7 and 5967.
8 MS. FOGEL: And before that I told you I
9 showed him the ones for '96 and '97.
10 MS. SPAGNOLI: And then I asked you to tell
11 me specifically which ones they were --
12 MS. FOGEL: That's correct.
Page 93
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 13 MS. SPAGNOLI: -- and that's the list that
14 you read me that I've just read back.
15 MS. FOGEL: Well, I'm going to rely on what
16 you're representing to me, because I don't have a
17 copy of the transcript yet, and if I missed one when
18 I read the list, then so be it, but I believe as I
19 sit here now -- and you've asked me. I told you
20 that I showed him all the '97's, and if that's a
21 '97, then I believe that's one of the ones I showed
22 him.
23 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. And you would have
24 showed him, again, the safety test letter and the
25 test request; is that right?
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1 MS. FOGEL: That's correct.
2 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay.
3 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Again, in connection with the
4 build condition of the vehicle that was tested in
5 test 5854, was this in all respects a production
6 1996 ZJ with the exception of the fuel sending unit
7 and the fuel tank?
8 A That's the build condition as written on this test
9 letter.
10 Q Okay. And this test had a fuel leakage at impact in
11 excess of the allowable limits, correct?
12 A Yeah. That is the description here. The post-test
13 letter describes it as greater than five ounces atPage 94
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt
14 impact.
15 Q And what page are you reading from, 4453?
16 A 4453. There is something written up there, but I
17 cannot read it and cannot find it typed in.
18 Q Okay. It says "Fuel at impact. Leakage exceeded
19 allowable limit," I believe. Does that look like
20 what it says?
21 A That, I would be guessing at, but it's something
22 close. I can't tell really.
23 Q Okay. There's no description of where the leak
24 occurred in this test, correct?
25 A No, there isn't.
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1 Q It's a leak that occurred at impact of greater than
2 five ounces, correct?
3 A That's what it indicates, yes, ma'am.
4 Q Do you know why this test vehicle leaked?
5 A I don't remember at the moment.
6 Q Okay. What is the dynamic crush in this test?
7 A Here's our dynamic crush of 20.3 inches.
8 Q Okay. Was the failure of this test reported to the
9 government?
10 A No.
11 Q Do you know why?
12 A It was a 1996 production vehicle to be modified with
13 '97 production intent parts. So it was a test of
Page 95
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 14 preproduction parts.
15 Q And the only preproduction parts were the tank and
16 the fuel sending unit, correct?
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. That's
18 not what the document says.
19 THE WITNESS: The description says that.
20 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right?
21 A The description says 1997 fuel sending unit and fuel
22 tank design.
23 Q And you don't know whether the failure occurred in
24 the preproduction parts or the production parts,
25 correct?
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1 A They are not clear as to where the failure occurs.
2 Q Okay. So you cannot answer my question; is that
3 right?
4 A Which question was that?
5 Q You don't know whether the failure occurred in the
6 preproduction parts or the production parts; am I
7 correct?
8 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
9 THE WITNESS: I don't know where the
10 failure occurred.
11 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Let's look at Exhibit 18,
12 test 5890.
13 MS. SPAGNOLI: It's actually the little
14 skinny one.Page 96
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15 MS. FOGEL: That's this one here.
16 THE WITNESS: Thanks.
17 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): This is an April 22, 1996 test
18 of a 1996 production ZJ modified to represent a
19 1997; am I correct?
20 A Exhibit 18 is a 1996 production vehicle with
21 modifications to the fuel tank, sending unit and
22 fuel tank design to represent the '97 intent.
23 Q Okay. This, again, refers to the fuel sending unit
24 and the new '97 fuel tank design, correct?
25 A Yes.
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1 Q It also references a trailer hitch single side
2 bracket on left rear. Is that the first time that
3 we've seen a test with this reinforcement bracket?
4 A Yes, to my knowledge, that's the first time I've
5 included that description in the test build
6 condition.
7 Q Okay. And what -- what was the result of this test?
8 A Post Test Remarks state "There were no fuel leaks at
9 impact [and] fuel system integrity was maintained."
10 Q Okay. Is there any note with respect to whether
11 there was contact between the fuel tank or fuel
12 lines and any components within the rear of the
13 vehicle?
14 A I don't appear to have the handwritten set of notes
Page 97
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 15 and all I can find for the notes are the written --
16 typed-in text of the post-test letter, and the only
17 indication there is that it passed the test.
18 Q Okay. But, again, given your observations and
19 experience in testing Grand Cherokees, you would
20 have expected that there would be contact between
21 the tank and the axle at least in the test; is that
22 right?
23 A Yeah, I would have expected the tank and axle to
24 contact.
25 Q Okay. Is there any other location where you would
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1 have expected contact between the tank or components
2 of the tank and the vehicle?
3 A The rear bumper contacts the inside of the -- or the
4 forward face of the rear bumper contacts the gas
5 tank.
6 Q Okay. Any other areas that you expected contact?
7 A No, not particularly, as I recall.
8 Q Okay. Let me ask you to take a look at Exhibit 19.
9 A Which one is 19?
10 Q This is test 5926, dated May 9, 1996. It's a 1996
11 production ZJ modified to represent 1997. Do you
12 see that?
13 A Yes, ma'am.
14 Q And this has a '97 fuel sending unit and fuel tank
15 design, correct?Page 98
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16 A It's described as having a 1997 fuel sending unit
17 and 1997 fuel tank design, yes.
18 Q And it has a skid plate, correct?
19 A Skid plate only, no trailer hitch bracket.
20 Q Okay. When it says "Skid plate only, no trailer
21 hitch bracket," is there some mechanism of
22 attachment of the skid plate that substitutes for
23 the frame rail reinforcement bracket?
24 A The skid plate is attached to the rear body-in-white
25 in the same structural area. I don't recall whether
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1 it uses the exact same bolt holes or not but it goes
2 in the same spot, so -- did that answer the
3 question?
4 Q Well, is the skid plate attachment meant to provide
5 the same reinforcement of the left frame rail as the
6 reinforcement bracket or the trailer hitch
7 attachment?
8 A The skid plate here, when we were testing it, we
9 wanted to make certain that it performed the same
10 way as the reinforcing bracket, so we wanted to see
11 if the skid plate -- because you can order a car
12 with skid plate only, and the idea was do we have to
13 add the bracket and the skid plate or is the skid
14 plate going to perform as well as the bracket did.
15 Q And what did you decide?
Page 99
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 16 A Well, this one passed the test and the skid plate
17 performed as well as the bracket in these tests.
18 Q And when you refer to a skid plate, what is a skid
19 plate?
20 A A skid plate is a large stamped metal, a basket
21 container, for lack of a better word, that covers
22 the entire gas tank and mounts up to the frame to
23 prevent the gas tank from getting damaged in
24 off-road maneuvers is its main intent, but it forms
25 a large metal shield to prevent all kinds of damage
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1 on the gas tank, primarily when it skids off and
2 over some under-vehicle object.
3 Q So the skid plate, you said, is a large metal shield
4 that prevents all kinds of damage occurring to the
5 gas tank; is that right?
6 A Yes, it prevents a variety of damage to the tank.
7 Q Okay. Can you -- look at the mechanical request for
8 the -- this crash test vehicle. Do you see where it
9 says "No Stoddard added at JTE fuel tank empty?"
10 A Yes, ma'am.
11 Q Does that mean the test was run without any Stoddard
12 in the tank?
13 A No, ma'am.
14 Q What does that mean?
15 A That means that we shipped the vehicle from
16 Jeep/Truck and Engineering facility to ChelseaPage 100
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17 without any of the Stoddard solvent in it.
18 Q Okay. And so you put the Stoddard in when it
19 arrived at the test facility?
20 A Yeah, and that should be noted in that summary by
21 the proving grounds guys because they're the ones
22 who put the Stoddard solvent in it.
23 Q Okay.
24 A Yeah, and here on your page 3177, it -- fuel type
25 and quantity, specific gravity, Stoddard solvent --
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1 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry.
2 THE WITNESS: Specific gravity, that's a
3 description of the Stoddard solvent, type, and then
4 it says right there they had 21.5 gallons into car.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): What was the speed that -- the
6 actual test speed of this test?
7 A This test speed was 30.1 miles an hour.
8 Q So it was fairly -- it was just above the 30 mile an
9 hour limit?
10 A Yes, one-tenth of a mile above the limit.
11 Q Okay. And the dynamic crush on this vehicle -- I'm
12 looking at page 3209 -- is 18.1 inches; is that
13 right?
14 A Yes, it is.
15 Q And that's the lowest one we've seen, right?
16 A Yes.
Page 101
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 17 Q And is this the only test that we've seen that
18 actually had a skid plate attached?
19 A So far, it's the only one with a skid plate.
20 Q Okay. Was there contact between the skid plate and
21 the differential in this case?
22 A I don't recall.
23 Q Are there photographs that show the underside of the
24 vehicle here?
25 A There are photographs.
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1 Q If we look at page 3221, do we actually see the skid
2 plate next to the differential?
3 A Just a second. Yeah, it is next to it. I'm not
4 sure what that large black line indicates, but,
5 yeah, it's right there next to it. You can see
6 targets U7 and U10 are on the skid plate and target
7 U6 is on the differential.
8 Q Can you hold that up for the camera and then just
9 point out what you mean by the target.
10 A This one is U10, this one is U7. There's a black
11 line, and then this one here is U6, and that's the
12 differential area here.
13 Q Okay. So that large white area, sort of lighter
14 appearing area is the shield that covers the gas
15 tank; is that right?
16 A Yes, ma'am. This is the photograph of the skid
17 plate post test.Page 102
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18 Q Okay. And does the shield also cover the front end
19 of the tank so that in this case the tank is not
20 contacting the differential; it's the shield that's
21 contacting the differential?
22 MS. FOGEL: Objection, form. You can
23 answer.
24 THE WITNESS: I know what you're asking me
25 and I don't remember whether it goes up there or
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1 not. I don't remember.
2 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Next let's look at test
3 5927. This is a 5-9-96 test and I've marked it as
4 Exhibit 20. This is a 1996 production ZJ modified
5 to represent the 1997, right?
6 A Yep, it's a 1996 production ZJ with modifications to
7 represent '97 design intent.
8 Q Okay. And the changes again here are we have the
9 '97 fuel sending unit and fuel tank, correct?
10 A Yes.
11 Q And here we have a full trailer hitch with no skid
12 plate and no bracket, right?
13 A That's the description.
14 Q Okay. And the trailer hitch, as we discussed,
15 attaches to the left frame rail similar to where the
16 skid plate attaches, correct?
17 A I believe it attaches in the same area of the
Page 103
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 18 vehicle, but like I said before, I'm not certain if
19 it uses the exact same attachment points.
20 Q At any rate, if you have the trailer hitch, did you
21 believe that you would have the similar
22 reinforcement in the left frame rail as you would
23 get with the actual reinforcing bracket? Is that
24 what you were testing?
25 A Yes, it's very similar. The reinforcing bracket is,
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1 in fact, that one-third of the trailer hitch. We
2 simply didn't assemble the whole trailer hitch from
3 the same stamping. That part is part of the trailer
4 hitch.
5 Q Okay. And can you tell me if you have any
6 photographs that would depict the underside where
7 the tank and the differential would be depicted in
8 the crash test, post-crash condition?
9 A I haven't seen these pictures in ten years. I think
10 photograph 3314 is post test, but there -- it would
11 have been their habit to put the little tiny word
12 "post" on a sticker and I don't see that there. I
13 do see it on 3317 --
14 Q Right.
15 A -- but it's not exactly the differential. It's sort
16 of sticking out of the corner.
17 Q You actually, if you look at photograph that is --
18 A Which one?Page 104
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19 Q -- 33 -- hold on one second. There was one -- 3309
20 looks like pre-impact the gas tank --
21 A That was a pre, yeah.
22 Q -- and the differential, right?
23 A Just a second -- 3309, I got it. 3309 appears to be
24 a pre-test photograph.
25 Q Could you hold that up and just show us what --
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1 where the edge of the gas tank is and then where the
2 edge of the differential is.
3 A So here is the gas tank edge and this outline here
4 is the differential edge, so they're separated by
5 this right here.
6 Q Okay. Now, it looks to me like there's something in
7 between the two. Is that the stabilizer bar?
8 A I don't know if that's the track bar there or not.
9 It should be, but it's hard to tell. I can't see
10 what it's connected to on each side. I think it's
11 the track bar, but it's in the right spot but the
12 angle looks funny to me, you know, because the track
13 bar typically goes over the top of the axle and
14 there it doesn't look like it's on top, so that's
15 why.
16 Q So we're looking at it from underneath looking up,
17 so it may actually be above the axle, but it just
18 looks like it's in between the tank and the
Page 105
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 19 differential in this picture?
20 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form.
21 THE WITNESS: This perspective is unusual.
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay.
23 A It doesn't appear to be in -- where it should be for
24 a production car.
25 Q Okay. So from -- with respect to the -- you call it
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1 a track bar. Is that the same as a stabilizer bar?
2 A The track bar bracket is what connects the axle to
3 the body, and this appears to be -- to me to be the
4 track bar bracket. As far as I know, there isn't
5 anything called a stabilizer bar.
6 Q Okay. In the track -- in the production condition,
7 is the track bar bracket in between the tank and the
8 differential or is it above it?
9 A The bracket, the track bar bracket, as you stated,
10 is welded to the axle and should be on top of the
11 axle tube and not between the gas tank and the
12 differential.
13 Q Okay. So in a production vehicle, there would be --
14 there would be space, clearance between the front of
15 the tank and the differential and not anything in
16 between those two components; is that right?
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form. You can
18 answer.
19 THE WITNESS: Let me make sure I understoodPage 106
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20 your question. There should be space between the
21 gas tank and the differential and the track bar --
22 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right.
23 A -- in production?
24 Q Right. So specifically there would not be a
25 component or part between the tank and the
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1 differential in production; is that right?
2 A There shouldn't be, but I'm not recalling if there
3 is anything else there. We talked a little bit
4 about the skid plate and I don't recall whether it
5 slips up in that area or not.
6 Q Okay.
7 A And that --
8 Q Right. But if you have a vehicle like this one that
9 doesn't have a skid plate and we look at 3314 -- can
10 you flip to that page again.
11 A Yes.
12 Q This does appear then from the condition to be a
13 post-impact photograph, correct?
14 A Yeah, it looks like a post-impact photograph. Like
15 I said, there's -- there should have been a little
16 word. If you notice on other photographs, they have
17 like a magnet or something written "post" on it, but
18 next to the test No. 5927, see, there's something
19 indescribably written there and that should say
Page 107
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 20 "post."
21 Q Okay.
22 A But --
23 Q Can you again hold up that picture and just show us
24 the edge of the tank and the edge of the
25 differential.
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1 A So here's -- the tank is this white unit here and
2 it's separated here by this black line, and then
3 this is the differential, this white part here.
4 Q And does it looks like the tank is actually in
5 contact with the differential in that picture?
6 A It's difficult to judge. There's a black line in
7 there, but whether that's contact or a shadow or
8 what, I -- I would have presumed, to my knowledge,
9 that the tank would be in contact with the
10 differential. Whether it is or not in this
11 photograph, but whether it touched it or not, that
12 should have been the normal way it runs.
13 Q Okay. Thank you. Do we have the dynamic crush
14 measurement for that test?
15 A Oh, I don't know.
16 Q 5927. I thought I had it, but -- try page 3302. It
17 looks to me like it says 19.6.
18 A Yeah, this one reports a dynamic crush at 19.6 for
19 30.1 miles an hour.
20 Q Okay. And did we have the dynamic crush for thePage 108
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21 5967? I think you have that test report there.
22 This is the one that you used for compliance, and it
23 was with the reinforcement bracket but not -- no
24 trailer hitch or skid plate.
25 A It's not here.
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1 Q There it is.
2 A Oh, right here. What was the question about 5867?
3 Q I'm going to ask you if you can locate for me the
4 dynamic crush for 5967, the compliance test.
5 A Dynamic crush.
6 Q And, again, just to verify, the vehicle, 5967, is a
7 -- is equipped with the reinforcement bracket but
8 not the skid plate or the trailer hitch.
9 A Yeah, vehicle 5967 with the trailer hitch bracket
10 added after the PO build, the configuration
11 represented 1997 V-1, which is production intent,
12 had a dynamic truck of 19.9 inches with a speed of
13 30.1.
14 Q Okay. So this is the test that was used to certify
15 compliance, correct?
16 A Yes, it was, in 1997, vehicle crash No. 5967,
17 certified the rear impact for the ZJ.
18 Q Okay. So the certification vehicle was actually the
19 vehicle that had the trailer hitch bracket as
20 opposed to the reinforcing bracket or the skid
Page 109
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 21 plate, correct?
22 A The certification vehicle had only the trailer hitch
23 bracket and not the skid plate and not the complete
24 trailer hitch.
25 Q Is the trailer hitch -- this is where you're not
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1 sure if the trailer hitch bracket resembles or is
2 the same as the reinforcement bracket; is that
3 right?
4 A Oh, no, no. The trailer hitch bracket is the exact
5 same part of the trailer hitch without the rest of
6 it.
7 Q Okay.
8 A The trailer hitch bracket and the reinforcing
9 bracket are the same.
10 Q Okay. So the vehicle that was certified as being in
11 compliance basically had the reinforcing bracket?
12 A The vehicle 5967 had the trailer hitch reinforcing
13 bracket.
14 Q Okay. And the test before that, 5927, had the
15 trailer hitch as well as the trailer hitch
16 reinforcing bracket, correct?
17 A The 5927 build condition is the full trailer hitch
18 which doesn't have an extra bracket.
19 Q Right.
20 A It is the bracket itself which includes then the
21 cross piece and the same bracket in a mirror on thePage 110
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22 right side, so it only had the one bracket just like
23 the compliance car did but it had in addition to it
24 welded to it the cross piece and the other
25 right-hand side, so there's only still the one
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1 bracket. It's just got the added trailer hitch
2 parts.
3 Q Okay.
4 A So there's only the one bracket on that one side.
5 Q I understand. I think we're talking about the same
6 thing, but --
7 A Okay.
8 Q -- 5927 --
9 A Yes.
10 Q -- has the left side frame rail bracket --
11 A Yep.
12 Q -- plus a cross member that goes outside the bumper
13 plus a bracket on the right frame rail?
14 A That's the complete trailer hitch, yes.
15 Q Okay. And that's what was tested in 5927, right?
16 A Yes.
17 Q 5926 has the skid plate?
18 A 5967, ma'am?
19 Q 5926, the one before that, the one that had the skid
20 plate.
21 A Right, okay, 5926.
Page 111
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 22 Q The skid plate would have the left side
23 reinforcement bracket, correct?
24 A No. The 5926 had skid plate only, no bracket.
25 Q Right. But it has an attachment to the left side
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1 frame rail that attaches in the same location and
2 performs the same function?
3 A The skid plate is attached at, I think -- I think
4 it's attached to the same spot the brackets go, but
5 the skid plate then is there in place of the
6 bracket.
7 Q Understood. But in terms of how it attaches, the
8 skid plate --
9 A Yeah.
10 Q -- does the skid plate attach in the same location
11 on the left side frame rail and the right side frame
12 rail as a trailer hitch would attach?
13 A That, I'm not sure about. There were a couple of
14 holes there, and I don't remember whether the
15 trailer hitch and the bracket and the skid plate all
16 used the same holes or not, so I can't remember. I
17 don't remember.
18 Q But when you say the skid plate is meant to be
19 instead of the reinforcing bracket, there's some
20 component of how the skid plate attaches that serves
21 the same function as the reinforcing bracket?
22 A The skid plate and the bracket both have thePage 112
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23 physical geometry of a right angle flange which has
24 a lot of load-carrying capability, and they both
25 bridge the pass-through hole for the fill and vent
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1 lines where they go through the rail, and they both
2 bridge that same spot with the same geometry, but
3 I'm not sure whether they attach in the same spots.
4 Q Okay. But the function as far as the -- managing
5 the energy is, in your opinion, equivalent --
6 A Yeah. Well, that's why we ran the test --
7 Q -- to the bracket?
8 A -- to prove that it was equivalent, uh-huh.
9 Q Okay.
10 A We thought it was and so, you know, we ran the test
11 to be sure.
12 Q Okay.
13 MS. SPAGNOLI: Let's go off the record. I
14 want to make sure I'm done. I think I am close, but
15 I want to just look at my notes.
16 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
17 11:35 a.m.
18 (Off the record.)
19 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: We're back on the record
20 at 11:50 a.m.
21 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay. Mr. Estes, just a few
22 follow-up questions. One of the things we talked
Page 113
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 23 about earlier was Stoddard solvent, and I'm not sure
24 the jury knows what that means or what it is. What
25 is Stoddard solvent?
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1 A Stoddard solvent is a gasoline substitute that we
2 use to have higher degree of safety for the crash
3 test personnel. It has the same specific gravity
4 which means it weighs the same per volume as
5 gasoline and it has extraordinarily similar fluid
6 qualities, and it's a standard substitute for
7 volatile gasoline in crash tests.
8 Q Is Stoddard solvent also red?
9 A There are different colored dyes that you can get
10 introduced to it. I don't recall it being
11 particularly red, but --
12 Q But there is some kind of a dye so that you can see
13 stains after a crash test?
14 A We have a dye; it's a tracer that allows it to be
15 seen in ultraviolet light, and you can wave the
16 ultraviolet light around and see the -- if there was
17 any leakage in a small amount of -- it's very
18 brightly covered under ultraviolet light, but it
19 doesn't exactly change its color to the human eye as
20 I recall.
21 Q I guess my question would be if you had Stoddard
22 solvent and a leak in a crash test, would the leaked
23 solvent be visible to the eye after the impact test?Page 114
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24 A Not always, no. I don't always see it after the
25 test.
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1 Q Do you know what -- would it look a different color?
2 Would it be a darker color or -- I mean, is your
3 solvent that Chrysler uses a red color?
4 A It looks an awful lot like gasoline. It's sort of a
5 pinky. You know, if you look at gasoline, it's not
6 exactly red. Like this is very much golden but the
7 gasoline is sort of a rose water colored. It's not
8 like bright red, like pink.
9 Q Right. But it's got a tint to it?
10 A Well, yeah.
11 Q A rose-colored tint?
12 A As I recall, it's sort of a very light rosy pink.
13 Q Okay. And when you have a leak in a test, you would
14 see traces of it and you could see it better if you
15 put ultraviolet light up to it?
16 A Yeah, you could see traces of it sometimes,
17 depending on what it's on, you know. It's like any
18 somewhat clear liquid on things. Sometimes it will
19 wet them, sometimes it will just be little spots,
20 depending on what it lands on.
21 Q Okay. And do you -- you also use an ultraviolet
22 light to try and see if there's been a leak and it
23 would leave a trace?
Page 115
Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 24 A There have been occasions when we have used
25 ultraviolet light to look to see stuff before we
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1 took it apart. Often you can't see where the leak
2 is if there is a leak in a development test. These
3 are all squashed together and you can't tell where
4 it comes from and you try to use that as a trace.
5 Q Okay. Can you look at Exhibit 15. This was crash
6 test 5681, and it's one where there was a leak that
7 was not noted with respect to the source of the
8 leak.
9 A 5681, yes, ma'am.
10 Q Okay. Do you remember this? We discussed this test
11 and you pointed out a photograph that showed the
12 valve on top of the tank. I'm not sure, is this the
13 vent valve or the --
14 A In 5681?
15 Q -- filler? Yeah, page 3163. This was the
16 photograph that you pointed out.
17 A If this is the test that I remember, and this
18 photograph seems to indicate this, this is a pretty
19 obvious hole.
20 Q Well, sir, can you look at 3163, that photograph.
21 A Yes, ma'am, I am.
22 Q That's the one we're looking at, right?
23 A Yes.
24 Q And what is the valve that we're looking at there?Page 116
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25 Which one is it?
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1 A This is -- the whole piece here is the top of the
2 fuel -- view -- fuel -- pardon me, the fuel sending
3 unit. This is the electric pump and sending unit
4 top.
5 Q All right. Now, is there any visible Stoddard
6 solvent in this picture?
7 A No, not in this picture.
8 Q Okay. All right. Now, let me change subjects and
9 go back to the test that occurred with the trailer
10 hitch bracket or the skid plate. 5890, could you
11 pull out that exhibit. It is test -- it's Exhibit
12 18, and 19 and 20 are the ones I'm going to ask you
13 about, or actually exhibit -- yeah.
14 A Pardon me. Which one now?
15 Q I want you to look at Exhibit 18, 19, and 20.
16 A Okay.
17 Q Whoops. I take that back. I want you to look at
18 18, 9 and 20. Nine is the actual compliance report,
19 the one that certified the 1997 vehicle as being in
20 compliance with the standard. Okay? I want to just
21 have those side by side.
22 A I have 9, 18 and 20. Is that what you're looking
23 for?
24 Q Right. Nine is the one -- 5967, test that is the
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1 A Yep.
2 Q And as we discussed, it had the trailer hitch
3 bracket and it had dynamic crush of 19.9 inches,
4 right?
5 A Just a minute. Yep, 19.9 inches is the dynamic
6 crush of 5967.
7 Q And then test 5890, which was Exhibit 18, was also a
8 vehicle that had the trailer hitch bracket, not the
9 full trailer hitch but just the bracket, correct?
10 A Yes.
11 Q And it had a dynamic crush of 20.4 inches, correct?
12 A Yes, vehicle crash test 5890 had a dynamic crush of
13 20.4 inches.
14 Q Okay. So the two vehicles that only had the bracket
15 had dynamic crush in the rear impact test of 19.9
16 and 20.4 inches, correct?
17 A Yes.
18 Q Okay. Now, if you look at Exhibit 19, which is the
19 test 5926, this is the test that had the skid plate
20 attached, correct?
21 A Just a second. I don't have 19. Twenty, nine --
22 Exhibit 19 -- skid plate on 5926. What was the
23 question?
24 Q You've got that test and it only had the skid plate?
25 It had the skid plate instead of the trailer hitchPage 118
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1 bracket, correct?
2 A 5926 had a skid plate and no trailer hitch bracket.
3 Q Right. And this was also -- so that's the
4 difference in the structure between the two tests
5 that we've just looked at and the test with the skid
6 plate, correct?
7 A Yes, I believe that is the primary difference.
8 There are some other things listed on some of the
9 vehicles, but that's the difference, I think, in the
10 area we're talking about.
11 Q Okay. And the dynamic crush in the test that had
12 the skid plate instead of the trailer hitch bracket
13 was 18.1 inches, correct?
14 A Yep.
15 Q Okay. And using those numbers from these three
16 tests then, would you agree with me that the
17 vehicle -- the Grand Cherokee that had the skid
18 plate compared to the vehicles that had the trailer
19 hitch bracket, that there was a more than a 10
20 percent difference between the dynamic crush in the
21 vehicles that only had the trailer hitch versus the
22 one that had the skid plate?
23 A Is there a 10 percent --
24 Q And I meant to say the trailer hitch bracket versus
25 the vehicle that had the skid plate.
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1 A In the two tests that I have here, 5890 and 5967,
2 the differences are 1.8 inches total, and so that's
3 not quite 10 percent, but they are -- that
4 difference between the smallest crush, 19.9 and
5 18.1, when you look at that difference, half of it
6 could be accounted for in the error of resolution,
7 because they're both plus or minus.
8 COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry.
9 THE WITNESS: Error in resolution. Both of
10 them are plus or minus one inch, but the difference
11 between the two, as anyone with arithmetic will tell
12 you, is 1.8 difference -- 1.8 inches at the noted
13 dynamic crush between 5926 and 5967 --
14 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Right.
15 A -- for two different build conditions.
16 Q Right. Well, they're the same build conditions, but
17 one has the hitch bracket and the other has the skid
18 plate? That's the difference?
19 A Yes, that's the difference in the build, yes.
20 Q Okay. And test 5890, which also had the hitch
21 bracket, had more than a 10 percent difference in
22 dynamic crush; in other words -- let me restate my
23 question.
24 5890, which was the other test with the
25 trailer hitch bracket instead of the skid plate, had
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1 more than two inches of dynamic crush than the test
2 that had only -- that had the skid plate, correct?
3 A Yes, the dynamic crush between vehicle crash test
4 No. 5926 and 5890 is 2.3 inches.
5 Q Okay. Which would be more than 10 percent?
6 A Yeah; it's about 11.
7 Q Okay.
8 MS. SPAGNOLI: All right. Thank you.
9 That's all the questions I have.
10 EXAMINATION
11 BY MS. FOGEL:
12 Q Mr. Estes, I have a few follow-up questions for you.
13 I'd like you to take a look, please, at Exhibit 16,
14 which is the vehicle crash test 5789.
15 A Yes.
16 Q Okay. Is that a development test?
17 A Yes.
18 Q Okay. And is that a development test where the
19 build condition indicates 1996 production ZJ
20 modified to represent 1997?
21 MS. SPAGNOLI: I'm going to object to the
22 form of the question. It's leading.
23 THE WITNESS: The Vehicle Crash Test Letter
24 describes VC5789 as a 1996 production ZJ modified to
25 represent 1997.
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1 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): And could you tell me at the bottom
2 of the build condition, the last line there, what
3 does that say?
4 A "1997 fuel sending unit and 1997 fuel tank design."
5 Q Okay. Does the 1997 fuel tank design also include
6 fuel rails?
7 A The fuel tank design and the fuel sending unit, I
8 think, includes the fuel rails and the fuel lines
9 that connect the rails to the tank.
10 Q Do fuel rails go to the engine of the vehicle?
11 A Yes, they do.
12 Q Okay. Could you please turn to the Fuel System and
13 Static Rollover Summary page, VI-1.
14 MS. SPAGNOLI: What's the Bates number on
15 that?
16 THE WITNESS: Is there a DC number?
17 MS. FOGEL: This doesn't have a Bates
18 number on it. I'm sorry. I have a copy of the
19 exhibit I would be glad to show you.
20 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay. I'll look for it. I
21 think I have it. It's 2006.
22 THE WITNESS: Oh, boy, yeah, I see 2006.
23 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): Can you read for us where it says
24 Under Post Test Fuel System Observations, No. 3? I
25 know it's not a very poor photocopy.
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1 MS. SPAGNOLI: It's not readable at all.
2 THE WITNESS: It starts out, it says
3 "No" -- and then I believe the next word is "fuel."
4 On this page, it's very unreadable, but if you'll
5 turn to 2008, there are Post Test Remarks that are
6 typed.
7 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): Okay. I'd like you -- do you know
8 what I'm going to do? I'll have this marked as the
9 next exhibit, because perhaps this is a better
10 photocopy that I have, so whatever number we're up
11 to, I'll have that marked.
12 MS. SPAGNOLI: Can I see it?
13 MS. FOGEL: Oh, certainly. I'll have that
14 marked as Estes -- what are we up to, 21?
15 MS. SPAGNOLI: Yeah, it's 21.
16 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): And I'd like you to just -- to the
17 extent that you're able to, read underneath the Post
18 Test Fuel System Observation section, No. 3, please.
19 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, maybe he can read the
20 whole thing, if we can read it.
21 MS. FOGEL: Yeah, I can, if you can't.
22 MS. SPAGNOLI: Well, let's see if he can.
23 MS. FOGEL: Okay.
24 THE WITNESS: It says, "No fuel leaks at
25 impact. Post test" --
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1 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): If you can read the part that's No.
2 3.
3 A No. 3, I think it says, "Slow leak (after roll) when
4 pressure tested is connected to fuel rail (at
5 Schrader valve)," I believe is what it says on No.
6 3.
7 Q Okay. Does that indicate to you the area of the
8 source of the leak in the engine compartment in
9 vehicle test 5789?
10 A Yes, it does.
11 MS. SPAGNOLI: Object to the form. It's
12 leading.
13 THE WITNESS: This comment here, with the
14 slow leak at the Schrader valve, indicates quite
15 precisely where the fuel leak is on VC5789.
16 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): And what is the source of that leak
17 that is indicated quite precisely?
18 A The Schrader valve, which is a small pressure-relief
19 valve, very similar to a tire valve, on the -- on
20 the fuel rail.
21 Q Okay. And was that fuel rail part of the 1997 fuel
22 tank design as referenced in the build condition --
23 MS. SPAGNOLI: Object to the form of the
24 question.
25 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): -- on that Vehicle Crash Test
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1 Letter 5789?
2 MS. SPAGNOLI: Object to the form of the
3 question, leading.
4 THE WITNESS: I think that the fuel tank
5 system included with the rails, the fuel lines, as
6 was initially described in the previous test and now
7 was shortened to just those two words --
8 COURT REPORTER: Was --
9 THE WITNESS: Was shortened to just those
10 descriptions, which would have included the rail and
11 the metal lines, and the rail would have included
12 this Schrader valve.
13 Q (BY MS. FOGEL): And, again, was VC5789 a
14 development test or something else?
15 A VC5789 is a development test.
16 Q If there was a failure in the 1997 fuel tank design
17 in this modified 1996 production ZJ, would
18 DaimlerChrysler have alerted the government to that?
19 A No, we would not have. It was testing before
20 production.
21 Q Okay.
22 MS. FOGEL: I have no further questions.
23 EXAMINATION
24 BY MS. SPAGNOLI:
25 Q Sir, let's look at test report 5441, Exhibit 14.
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1 This is a report that --
2 A Does it have a number?
3 Q Exhibit 14.
4 A Okay.
5 Q Specifies on the bottom under build condition, "1996
6 co-extruded fuel tank with reinforced sending unit
7 cover," right?
8 A Yes, ma'am.
9 Q And it separately states, "1996 steel fuel rails and
10 matching line bundle," correct?
11 A Yes, ma'am.
12 Q And it doesn't refer to a Schrader valve, does it?
13 A No, it doesn't. The Schrader valve is integral to
14 the build of the fuel rail.
15 Q Right. And the Schrader valve -- there was a
16 Schreuder valve and a fuel line in the 1994
17 production built ZJ Grand Cherokee, right?
18 A I don't know that for sure.
19 Q There was a fuel rail and a Schrader valve in the
20 1995 production built ZJ, wasn't there?
21 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
22 answer.
23 THE WITNESS: I can't be certain.
24 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): There was a fuel line, a fuel
25 rail and a Schrader valve in the 1996 production
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1 built ZJ, correct?
2 A I don't know.
3 Q You don't know?
4 A I don't know if there was a Schrader valve on the
5 fuel rail before these changes came in.
6 Q Okay. So when you refer to a 1996 production ZJ,
7 you don't know if it had a Schrader valve in the
8 1996 production vehicle; is that right?
9 A In the 1996 production vehicles there is no
10 knowledge that I have of what the rail was or
11 wasn't, whether it had a Schrader valve in it or
12 didn't.
13 Q Okay. And in the test that you -- the description
14 of the test that you have for the test 5789, you do
15 not have a description of a different fuel rail or
16 line bundle from production -- from the production
17 vehicle; is that right?
18 A No, the description in 5789 indicates only fuel
19 sending unit and fuel tank design, which, as I
20 believe, is inclusive of this whole package of the
21 new fuel system that we were trying to put in.
22 Q Well, I know that you are saying that --
23 A But it does not say it.
24 Q -- because you're trying to explain why you would
25 have called out in one test report a different fuel
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1 rail and line whereas in the report 5789 you don't
2 call that out. That's what you're trying to explain
3 to us, right --
4 MS. FOGEL: Objection.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): -- why you would have done it in
6 one and not the other?
7 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
8 answer.
9 THE WITNESS: When we write a test request
10 like this, we would normally have had, when the
11 first change comes in, a large description of it,
12 and then that change will get shortened as you go
13 forward. I believe that's what happened here.
14 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, isn't it what happened
15 here is that the test report dated April 12, 1995,
16 5441, actually contained the parts that were going
17 to be implemented in the 1996 production vehicle and
18 it predates your certification of compliance of the
19 1996 production vehicle?
20 A The build of vehicle 5441 is production intent for
21 1996.
22 Q Right.
23 A And it's done as a test in the prototype stage
24 before we went to production.
25 Q Right. And what you're testing is a new fuel tank
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1 and new fuel rails and matching line bundle that
2 were intended to go into the 1996 production
3 vehicle, right?
4 A At that time, in '95, they were intended to go into
5 the 1996.
6 Q Right. And this test is dated April 12, '95?
7 A Yep.
8 Q So before you certified in July of 1995 the 1996
9 production vehicle, correct?
10 A The test is before we did certification.
11 Q And, in fact, what happened was you actually
12 implemented in production steel fuel rails and
13 matching line bundle in the 1996 production vehicle,
14 and the only thing you didn't do was the new fuel
15 tank and fuel sending unit which you were still
16 testing in 1996 for the 1997 model vehicle, right?
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form, assumes
18 facts not in evidence.
19 THE WITNESS: Yeah, I couldn't say that,
20 because I don't know for certain --
21 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Okay.
22 A -- whether those parts were released separate from
23 the fuel tank system.
24 Q Well, since you don't call them out as being
25 nonproduction in your 5789 test report, one
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1 explanation for the reason they're not called out is
2 because between April of '95 and January of '96 the
3 fuel rails and matching line bundle that you tested
4 in April of '95 actually became production parts,
5 correct?
6 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
7 answer.
8 THE WITNESS: That is one possible
9 explanation.
10 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And if that is the explanation,
11 and, in fact, the fuel rails and matching line
12 bundle had become production in a '96 Jeep Grand
13 Cherokee that you tested on January 18, '96, and you
14 had a Schrader valve leak in the test, that would be
15 a condition you should have reported to the
16 government because it was a failure of a production
17 vehicle, correct?
18 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
19 THE WITNESS: On the assumption that the
20 rail was released, then if it was in production and
21 it failed in a test, we would have reported it.
22 This is why I believe the description fuel sending
23 unit and fuel tank design includes the rail and gas
24 lines because I don't recall what would have been a
25 very large issue of reporting it to the government
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1 at failure. I believe the test 5789 had the
2 complete fuel system that hadn't been changed, which
3 included the tank, the lines, the rails and the
4 bundle.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): And you're speculating, are you
6 not, as to whether the parts that were proposed in
7 your April '95 test had become production parts
8 before you ran the test in January of '96, right?
9 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form.
10 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): You said you didn't know.
11 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form,
12 mischaracterizes his testimony.
13 THE WITNESS: I am not aware that any part
14 of the fuel system was released as described in 5441
15 before it passed the compliance tests.
16 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Which compliance tests?
17 A Vehicle 5967.
18 Q Right. And you would agree with me, though, that
19 you do not have in your either memory bank or at
20 your disposal the actual production parts on the
21 1996 ZJ vehicle and whether it included the steel
22 fuel rails, Schrader valve and matching line bundle
23 that was tested in April of '95, correct?
24 A No, and that's what I don't remember, whether --
25 Q Okay.
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Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 1 A -- the vehicle in 1-18-96, VC5789 had those parts.
2 It's a presumption on my part that the description
3 includes the entire fuel system, and I didn't
4 describe it completely.
5 Q And you would agree with me you did describe it in
6 the April '95 test report as a separate item,
7 correct?
8 A In the 4-12-95 on 5441, I described a complete
9 system with the three lines of description there,
10 and it would have been my general habit to shorten
11 that down to the one line.
12 Q Well, so you broke your habit in the report where
13 you listed it separately or you just felt a need to
14 do it there and not --
15 THE WITNESS: This is the first occurrence
16 of it.
17 MS. FOGEL: Objection to form,
18 argumentative.
19 THE WITNESS: This 5441 is the first
20 occurrence of these parts, and so they were
21 completely described there, and then subsequent
22 testing afterwards uses a shortened version of it.
23 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): You're speculating about that,
24 aren't you, sir?
25 A No.
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2 THE WITNESS: When you introduce the first
3 part -- you can see as you go through all of this
4 work, the first time it's introduced, it's fully
5 described, and then subsequent to that, the trailer
6 hitch single side bracket becomes hitch bracket.
7 They don't always type in all of the description
8 every time you use it.
9 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, you're supposed to put in
10 the things that do not represent production, and in
11 the case of the 1996 test, the only thing about the
12 fuel system that you said was not production was the
13 tank and the sending unit, right?
14 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form,
15 argumentative. You can answer.
16 THE WITNESS: The test request states
17 clearly that the parts that were changed were the
18 1997 fuel sending unit and 1997 fuel tank design.
19 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): It doesn't say design, does it?
20 A Yes, it does.
21 Q Well, you're saying fuel tank design means something
22 other than the fuel tank? It means all the other
23 parts in the fuel system? That's what you're
24 telling us?
25 A It was --
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1 MS. FOGEL: Objection to the form. You can
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Estes 20050527 Vol II.txt 2 answer.
3 THE WITNESS: It was probably more properly
4 described as fuel tank system than fuel tank design.
5 Q (BY MS. SPAGNOLI): Well, it doesn't say fuel tank
6 system, does it?
7 A No, ma'am, it does not. It says fuel tank design.
8 MS. SPAGNOLI: Very good. No further
9 questions.
10 MS. FOGEL: I may have one follow-up. I
11 have to just go off the record.
12 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Going off the record at
13 12:18 p.m.
14 (Off the record.)
15 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: We're back on the record
16 at 12:24 p.m.
17 MS. FOGEL: I have no further questions.
18 MS. SPAGNOLI: Okay, so we're done. Thank
19 you.
20 VIDEO TECHNICIAN: Deposition concluded at
21 the 12:24 p.m.
22 (Deposition concluded at or
23 about 12:24 p.m.)
24
25
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1 S T I P U L A T I O N S
2Page 134
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3 IT IS HEREBY STIPULATED AND AGREED by and
4 between the attorneys for the respective parties
5 hereto that all rights provided by the C.P.L.R,
6 including the right to object to any question,
7 except as to the form, or to move to strike any
8 testimony at this examination, are reserved; and, in
9 addition, the failure to object to any question or
10 to move to strike testimony at this examination
11 shall not be a bar or waiver to make such motion at,
12 and is reserved for, the trial of this action.
13 IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED AND AGREED that
14 this examination may be sworn to, by the witness
15 being examined, before a Notary Public other than
16 the Notary Public before whom this examination was
17 begun, but the failure to do so, or to return the
18 original of this examination to counsel, shall not
19 be deemed a waiver of the rights provided by Rule
20 3116, C.P.L.R, and shall be controlled thereby.
21 IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED AND AGREED by and
22 between the attorneys for the respective parties
23 hereto that a copy of this Examination Before Trial
24 shall be furnished without charge to the attorneys
25 representing the witness testifying herein.
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1 FURTHER DEPONENT SAYETH NOT:
2
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4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13 _________________________________
14 JUDSON B. ESTES
15
16
17 Subscribed and sworn to before me 18 this ____day of _____________, 20___. ___________________________________ 19 Notary Public, _____________ County
20 My Commission expires: _____________________.
21
22
23
24
25
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1 STATE OF MICHIGAN ) ) ss 2 COUNTY OF MACOMB )
3 I, Melinda S. Moore, (CSR-2258), a NotaryPage 136
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4 Public commissioned and qualified in and for
5 the State of Michigan, do hereby certify there
6 came before me on the date and at the location
7 hereinbefore mentioned, the following named
8 person, to-wit: JUDSON B. ESTES, who was by
9 me sworn to testify truthfully concerning the
10 matters in controversy in this cause; that he
11 was examined upon his oath and his examination
12 was reduced to typewritten form under my
13 supervision; that the deposition is a true
14 record of the testimony given by the witness.
15 I further certify that I am neither
16 attorney or counsel for, nor related to or
17 employed by any of the parties hereto or
18 financially interested in the action.
19 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my
20 hand and affixed my Notarial Seal this 20th
21 day of June, 2005.
22
23 Melinda S. Moore, Notary Public 24 Macomb County, Michigan My commission expires: 9-6-2010 25
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